The updated version
of the EPO Guidelines for Examination is now available (here).
The new guidelines come into force on 1 November 2019. The guidelines, as the
name suggests, are a guide to the current case law and practise of the EPO and
are not legally binding (see IPKat here
for a full discussion of legal precedent at the EPO and the role of the
guidelines). The 2019 update to the
guidelines incorporates some of the significant developments in the established
case law of the Boards of Appeal. One key change to the guidelines this
year is an update to the assessment of novelty of selection inventions. Other updates include clarification of the definition of “substance or composition”
and a new section on the criteria of reasonable expectation in an assessment of
obviousness for biotechnology inventions.
A novel selected sub-range
is no longer required to be a “purposive selection”
In a welcome update, the 2019 guidelines have been updated
to reflect the recent Boards of Appeal case law on selection inventions. European
patent law considers a selection from the prior art as novel under
Article 54EPC if: a) the end points of a claimed sub-range or any point falling within
the claimed sub-range are not be disclosed in the prior art and b) the
end-points of the claimed range are "sufficiently removed"
from the individual elements disclosed in the prior art.
Historically, the EPO also required the
selection to be non-arbitrary or “purposive”. In other words, the selection had
to be linked to a technical effect (
T
0198/84 (Thiochloroformates) (see r. 7) and
T
0279/89 (r. 4.1)).
|
Reviewing the case law |
However, recent Boards of Appeal decisions have departed
from the requirement of a selection to be purposive (e.g.
T
261/15). In
T
1233/05, the Board of Appeal observed that the requirement for a
purposive selection of a claimed sub-range "appears to fall back upon
considerations which should be taken into account in the assessment of
inventive step rather than in that of novelty" (r. 4.4). The 2019 EPO
guidelines have been updated to reflect this position (
G-VI-8,
and
G-VII-12).
Notably however, the updated EPO guidelines do not incorporate the
recent Boards of Appeal case law on the novelty of purity selection inventions.
For many years the EPO considered an increase in the purity of a compound a special
case with respect to novelty. The burden of proof was placed on the applicant
to show that the claimed level of purity was never achieved in the prior art.
However, in a decision last year (
T
1085/13), a Board of Appeal found that previous decision of the
Boards were contrary to the principle that novelty can only destroyed by a
clear and unambiguous disclosure in the prior art (IPKat post
here).
With regards to purity inventions, the 2019 guidelines still only indicate that
“[a] known compound is not rendered novel merely because it is available with a
different degree of purity if the purity can be achieved by conventional means
(see T 360/07)” (G-VI-7).
How to define a
“substance or composition”?
The EPC provides for the patenting of the first or second
medical use of a known “substance or composition”. The provision is intended to
exclude the patenting of the second medical use of a device. However, "substance
or composition" is not defined in the EPC. Determining whether or not
something is a substance or composition is not always easy (IPKat:
Substance
or device - a distinction without a difference?).
The updated guidelines states that guidance on products
which can be seen as "substances or compositions" can be found in
T
1758/15. The Board in
T
1758/15 defined a "substance
or composition" as a product that achieves a direct therapeutic effect by
a chemical, as opposed to physical, interaction with the body. However, the
current case law does not provide guidance on how a physical versus chemical
interaction should be determined, for example with respect to products such as
tissue scaffolds.
“Reasonable
expectation of success” is not equivalent to “a hope to succeed”
A whole new section has been added to the guidelines on obviousness in the
biotechnology field (
G-VII-13
Inventive step assessment in the field of biotechnology). The
section in particular imports Boards of Appeal case law from
T
296/93 on the meaning of “reasonable expectation of success” in
the context of an obviousness analysis. The updated guidelines emphasize that a
reasonable expectation of success “is not to be confused with the ‘hope to
succeed’. If researchers are aware when embarking on their research that, in
order to reach a technical solution, they will need not only technical skill
but also the ability to make the right non-trivial decisions along the way,
this cannot be regarded as a "reasonable expectation of success"’
(see also
Case
Law of the Boards of Appeal, I.D.7.1).
Novelty of a product
claim with process features
A new section confirms that a claim may contain both product
and process features (
F-IV-4.12.1
Product claim with process features). The guidelines also
clarify that the same criteria of novelty should be applied to such claims as
are applied to product-by-process claims. Particularly, the process features of
a product claim with process features are only novel if the product produced by
the process is novel [Merpel: is this sentence in contention for the patent
tongue-twister of the year?].
The hot chilli pepper
of “essentially biological processes”
The European patent community is eagerly awaiting the
response of the Enlarged Board of Appeal (EBA) to the EPO president’s referral
in
G
3/19 (Pepper) (IPKat post:
Pepper
gets spicy: The EPO President's Referral to the EBA). The nub of
the issue is whether the Administrative Council’s amendment of
Rule
28(2) EPC (excluding products produced by essentially biological
processes from patentability) was lawful given the contradiction of the new
Rule with the interpretation of
Article
53(b) EPC by the EBA in
G
2/12 (Broccoli/Tomato II).
Whilst the President’s referral is pending, the guidance that
Rule
28(2) EPC excludes
products produced by essentially biological processes from patentability
remains unchanged in the 2019 guidelines (G-II.5.4). However, as of 4 April
2019, all proceedings before the EPO potentially impacted by the outcome of the
referral have been stayed
ex officio
until the EBA’s decision on the referral (
EPO
Notice).
In a minor update, the guidelines on this topic have been
updated to explicitly specify that selfing (i.e. self-fertilization) of a transgenic
plant should be considered an “essentially biological process”.
The exclusion of
computer programs from patentability
The patentability of software is another hot topic at the
moment, and subject to its own referral to the EBA (IPKat:
The
patentability of computer simulated methods - another referral to the Enlarged
Board of Appeal). The 2019 guidelines include some updates to
the section relating the patentability of artificial intelligence and machine
learning. In particular, the guidelines now clarify that “[t]erms such as ‘support
vector machine’, ‘reasoning engine’ or ‘neural network’ may, depending on the
context, merely refer to abstract models or algorithms and thus do not, on
their own, necessarily imply the use of a technical means. This has to be taken
into account when examining whether the claimed subject-matter has a technical
character as a whole (Art. 52(1), (2) and (3))”.
Final note and
question
Attentive readers may have noticed that many of the updates
this year are in the form of citations of Boards of Appeal decisions. Case law
references from the Boards have in the past been confined to the Case Law of
the Boards of Appeal. The Guidelines have previously mostly refrained from referencing Boards of Appeal decisions on which the guidance was based. Why the
change? Do readers have any insights?
Novelty of selection inventions
ReplyDeleteIt is all very nice to decide that the criterion for purposive selection should belong to inventive step rather than to novelty. In any case it means that in the future, novelty over a prior art document under Art 54(3) can be achieved by choosing an arbitrary range. I do not see the interest and usefulness of such a change.
Novelty vs. purity
For the time being the decision which recognised that reaching a higher purity confers novelty is a one of, and it may well stay like this.
Substance or composition
A substance or a composition is an item of material which disappears during its use. This cannot be said from a device, even if it is introduced in the body. A recent example is given in T 2136/15. In this decision the BA refused to refer a corresponding question to the EBA. The same happened in T 1069/11.
T 1758/15 is the result of a long line of decisions in which the BA always concluded that medical use claims are only available for substances and compositions and not for devices. T 2136/15 and T 1069/11 merely confirm T 1758/15.
Three point test (former essentiality test) H-V, 3.1 - Not commented in the blog.
In spite of the heavy criticism of the Boards for this test, it is still present in the Guidelines. This is a good thing, as it is a good tool when deciding whether a feature can be deleted or not. If the figure is not inextricably linked with the other features of the claim, the deletion can also be considered directly and unambiguously derivable from the original disclosure. The gold standard and the three point test are equally valuable.
Clarity of parameters in claims- Not commented in the blog.
The amendment is nice to look at, but it means that before grant clarity is actually checked by the examining divisions. If the claim is novel and inventive over the prior art, then clarity is often left aside.
In opposition, the absence of a method for measuring the parameter can bring about problems. Either the patent is revoked for lack of sufficiency, or determining whether a third party operates within the claimed range is a matter of clarity, and it ends there.
It all depends on the Board which will deal with the case. Such a lottery is not good for business, and it is to be hoped that the Enlarged Board will look into the matter one day or another.
It is good that T 1931/14 has been added to T 304/08 in F-IV, 4.13. The former decision is much better in the analysis of the situation.
T decisions in the Guidelines
Normally a T decision is only binding in the circumstances it has been taken. The party wanting to use it has to demonstrate that it applies in the new instance.
Roughly speaking, the Guidelines are binding for divisions of first instance. They are never binding for the Boards.
It is thus better to have the decisions mentioned as such in the Guidelines rather than to merely refer to their catchword or to quote part of them. The situation is thus much clearer for all.
Re substance or composition
ReplyDeleteSince A53(c) refers to "surgery or therapy", it follows that a substance or composition for use in such a method is not required to have a therapeutic effect if used in a method of surgery. The therapeutic effect case law arose under EPC1977 with regard to Swiss Type claims which related to pharmaceutical preparations. Accordingly, the previous case law should not be used to limit the meaning of the EPC after a change in the law.
Dear Kant,
ReplyDeleteThe whole difference between EPC1973 and EPC 2000 is that the wording which was previous in Art 52(4) has been transferred to Art 53, c). There has been no change in the law, and hence no reason to change case law in this matter.
Swiss type claims were ever only allowed for substances and compositions, never for devices, and this is still valid today, even if Swiss-type claims are not any longer possible.