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European Patent Oppositions as Business Tools

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Oppositions can further the interests of a business. By making life more difficult ... Prevents a separate nullity action being started in Germany. www.aplf.org ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: European Patent Oppositions as Business Tools


1
European Patent Oppositions as Business Tools
  • Richard Bizley

Tel 44 (0)1992 561756
richard.bizley_at_hlbbshaw.com
hlbbshaw.com
www.aplf.org
2
Oppositions can further the interests of a
business
  • By making life more difficult for competitors
  • By maximising the chance of freedom to use
  • By providing a negotiating weapon

www.aplf.org
3
Oppositions are easily and readily available to
all
  • No disclosed interest needed
  • Initial filing can be relatively cheap
  • Prosecution files up to grant can readily be
    reviewed online
  • Lack of familiarity with the process should not
    be a barrier to starting

www.aplf.org
4
Some Advantages of Oppositions (1)
  • EPO oppositions permit an attack against all
    individual national state patents in one
    procedure
  • A final central decision to revoke made at the
    EPO is binding on the national states
  • The process is slow
  • Oppositions do not go away merely because an
    opponent withdraws a patentee is compelled to
    deal with the case made against him or lose
    control

www.aplf.org
5
Some Advantages of Oppositions (2)
  • Oppositions can be filed without revealing the
    name of the true opponent
  • Oppositions can be filed for relatively minimal
    expense compared to potential costs in litigation
  • There is no need necessarily to attend expensive
    oral proceedings in Munich or The Hague
  • There is no costs penalty for early withdrawal

www.aplf.org
6
Negative Effects of an Opposition to a Patentee
  • Removes the relative certainty of grant
  • Commits the patentee to expense and effort
    (management time)
  • Might result in revocation across Europe
  • Might be bad news for investors and raising money
  • Might get in the way of commercial deals
  • Might delay business development
  • Might result in infringement proceedings being
    stayed

www.aplf.org
7
Possible Suspension of Proceedings in National
States
  • National courts sometimes suspend national
    proceedings pending the outcome of an opposition
  • Respect given to Opposition Division decisions,
    even if not generally binding
  • Even UK courts take judicial notice of Board of
    Appeal decisions
  • New arguments? possibly no suspension
  • Flaws in the EPO decision? possibly no
    suspension
  • Timing financial considerations, administration
    of justice

8
Some Drawbacks of Filing an Opposition
  • Sometimes results in a patentee improving the
    claims
  • Draws unwelcome attention, but consider a straw
    man
  • Prevents a separate nullity action being started
    in Germany

www.aplf.org
9
What is a European Patent Opposition?
  • An opposition is the sole post-grant procedure of
    significance where the EPO retains jurisdiction
  • Oppositions are initially dealt with by
    Opposition Divisions composed of patent Examiners
  • The importance of text approval an opposition
    suspends this
  • A patentee cannot presently self-oppose (G3/97)
  • The public interest oppositions can be
    withdrawn, but opposition arguments cannot

10
Possible Outcomes
  • Total revocation
  • Maintenance of the patent as granted
  • Maintenance of the patent in amended form
  • Effective for all designated States

www.aplf.org
11
Basic Opposition Procedure The Start
  • The grounds of opposition (Article 100 EPC) are
    lack of basic patentability, insufficiency
    (non-enablement), added matter
  • Lack of patentability is not a unified ground
  • At least one intelligible ground of opposition
    does the trick, but..
  • It is good tactics to find something under every
    ground
  • Filing the notice of opposition identify the
    opponent, identify the patent, identify the
    representative (if any) and indicate the facts,
    evidence and arguments relied upon (Rule 55 EPC)
  • Pay the fee!!
  • Intervention under Article 105 EPC (notice within
    3 months of being sued)

12
Some Timing Considerations for Starting an
Opposition
  • Nine months from grant, inextensible
  • If no commercial reasons to the contrary, oppose
    late
  • If likelihood of infringement, oppose early
    (possible stays in contracting States)
  • Consider early disclosure of grounds of
    opposition in the context of negotiation

www.aplf.org
13
Basic Opposition Procedure The Prosecution
Phase to an Initial Decision
  • Timing
  • The patentee gets four months to reply, with
    possible extensions
  • The Opposition Division may request further
    submissions from the parties (but generally does
    not)
  • The Summons to Oral Proceedings, and the
    provision of a preliminary opinion
  • Rule 71a, last written submissions (one month or
    two?)
  • The oral proceedings
  • Total timing to an Opposition Division 2 to 3
    years, sometimes more
  • The interlocutory nature of an Opposition
    Division decision
  • If no appeal, provision of fresh translations
    required for an amended patent throughout Europe

14
Good Tactics for an Opponent
  • Be as clear as circumstances permit
  • If possible, know your Opposition Division
  • Give the Opposition Division what it wants
  • Respond to evidence
  • Respond to any concerns of the Opposition
    Division (the preliminary opinion)
  • Discriminate between what must be filed by the
    end of the Rule 71a period and what can be left
    for Oral Proceedings
  • Try to find additional arguments (not new
    grounds) for Oral Proceedings
  • Do not go against existing case law
  • Try for squeeze effects

15
Appeals (1)
  • Appeals to the Technical Board of Appeal
  • The Technical Board of Appeal is at the EPO not
    of the EPO
  • Boards of Appeal must be judicial
  • The effect of an appeal is suspensive
  • Tribunal quality is generally high

www.aplf.org
16
Appeals (2)
  • Timing and procedure is similar to that before
    the Opposition Divisions, but
  • essentially the whole case should be presented at
    the start
  • Boards of Appeal do their own research
  • New philosophically- or legally-based arguments
    are more acceptable than to an Opposition
    Division
  • in rare case there can be a referral to the
    Enlarged Board of Appeal (Article 112)
  • Boards of Appeal are very conscious of the public
    duty

www.aplf.org
17
Something for the Future!
  • EPC 2000 comes into force on 13th December 2007
    at the latest amends basic EPC law
  • New provisions for limitation or revocation of a
    patent at the request of the proprietor
  • Extant opposition proceedings will take
    precedence over limitation or revocation
  • Petitions for very limited appellate review by
    the Enlarged Board of Appeal if-
  • a member of the Board of Appeal should not have
    been on the relevant board
  • fundamental breach of Article 113 EPC
    (opportunity to comment on grounds or evidence,
    use of the right text)
  • any other fundamental procedural defect
  • criminal act
  • Enlarged Board review will not have suspensive
    effect
  • A patent may be surrendered (or lapsed), and
    opposition may still be filed

18
European Patent Oppositions as Business Tools
Questions?
  • Richard Bizley

Tel 44 (0)1992 561756
hlbbshaw.com
richard.bizley_at_hlbbshaw.com
www.aplf.org
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