List of decisions of the EPO Boards of Appeal relating to Article 52(2) and (3) EPC

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This list provides a guide to decisions of the Boards of Appeal of the European Patent Office (EPO) relating to Article 52(2) and (3) EPC. These decisions touch the issue of patentable subject-matter under the European Patent Convention (EPC). The accompanying notes offer an explanation as to the content of the decision. For an introduction to patentable subject-matter under the EPC, see Patentable subject-matter under the EPC and Software patents under the EPC. The organisation of the list is by date of the decision. The criteria for inclusion in the list are:

1980 – 1989

1990 – 1994

1995 – 1999

2000 – 2004

2005 – 2009

From 2010

See also

Legal requirements applicable to European patent applications and patents
Note: The above list of legal requirements is not exhaustive.

Notes

  1. The following decisions have been published on the Official Journal of the EPO, or will be published at the Official Journal, and the decision explicitly mentions Article 52(2) and/or (3) EPC in the reasons, but the mention is only tangential or the case exclusively relates to procedural questions. The mention of Article 52(2) and/or (3) EPC is tangential in the following cases:
    • In decision T 820/92, (Contraceptive method/THE GENERAL HOSPITAL), of January 11, 1994, (OJ 3/1995, 113), the Board held that a parallel could not be made between Article 52(2) EPC and Article 52(4) EPC because no provision similar to Article 52(3) EPC limits the exclusion of Article 52(4) EPC (T 820/92, Reasons for the decision 5.4).
    • In decision T 1055/92, (Clarity/AMPEX CORPORATION), of March 31, 1994, (OJ 4/1995, 214), the Board mentioned Article 52(2) to state that it had not investigated "how far the invention as claimed might fall under the exclusions of Article 52(2) EPC" (T 1055/92, Reasons 7).
    • In decision T 82/93, (Cardiac pacing/TELECTRONICS), of May 15, 1995, (OJ 5/1996, 274), the attention was again drawn on the difference between Article 52(2) EPC and Article 52(4) EPC, respectively. (T 82/93, Reasons 1.1)
    • In decision T 1054/96, (Transgenic plant/NOVARTIS), of October 13, 1997, (OJ 11/1998, 511), the Board held that the exclusion of plant and animal varieties in Article 53(b) EPC is in a different category from the exclusions of Article 52(2) and (4) EPC (T 1054/96, Reasons 45, 53 and 57).
    • In decisions J 9/98 and J 10/98, (Priority from India/ASTRAZENECA), of December 2, 2002, (OJ 5/2003, 184), it was briefly mentioned that the question of the compliance of EPC provisions with the provisions of the TRIPS Agreement had been touched in T 1173/97 and T 935/97 regarding the definition of the exclusion of programs for computers as such from patentability in Article 52(2) and (3) EPC.
    The following cases relate to procedural questions:
    • Decision T 937/91, (Grounds for opposition/THOMAS DE LA RUE), of November 10, 1994 (OJ 1-2/1996, 25).
    • Decision G 1/95, (Fresh grounds for opposition/DE LA RUE), of July 19, 1996 (OJ 11/1996, 615).

References

  1. For a list of decisions published in the Official Journal of the EPO until November 2006 included, see Official Journal EPO 12/2006, pages 2 and 3.
  2. T 51/84, OJ 7/1986, 226.
  3. T 51/84, Headnotes 1 and 2.
  4. T 208/84, OJ 1/1987, 14.
  5. Case Law of the Boards of Appeal, page 3.
  6. 1 2 G 2/88, Reasons for the Decision 8.
  7. Cited in T 854/90 of March 19, 1992, referring to T 208/84, Reasons 16.
  8. T 26/86, OJ 1-2/1988, 19.
  9. T 115/85, OJ 1-2/1990, 30.
  10. T 22/85, OJ 1-2/1990, 12.
  11. T 6/83, OJ 1-2/1990, 5.
  12. T 38/86, OJ 9/1990, 384.
  13. T 163/85, OJ 9/1990, 379.
  14. T 119/88, OJ 9/1990, 395.
  15. G 2/88, OJ 4/1990, 93.
  16. G 2/88, Summary of the Procedure V. (b).
  17. G 2/88, Reasons for the Decision 7.3.
  18. T 158/88, OJ 11/1991, 566.
  19. T 603/89, OJ 5/1992, 230.
  20. T 854/90, OJ 11/1993, 699.
  21. T 164/92, OJ 5/1995, 305.
  22. T 110/90, OJ 8/1994, 557.
  23. T 769/92, OJ 8/1995, 525.
  24. Arnoud Engelfriet, Taking care of business (methods). How the EPO today refuses inventions involving non-technical features, epi Information 2/2006, pp. 69-72.
  25. T 1002/92, OJ 9/1995, 605.
  26. T 1173/97, OJ 10/1999, 609.
  27. 1 2 3 4 5 Stefan Steinbrener (23–24 March 2011). Case law of the EPO boards of appeal: a review by internal and external experts, The patentability of computer-implemented inventions, Part 2: Case law relevant to CII. Munich, Germany: European Patent Office. 9:25 to 9:50 minutes in. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
  28. T 1194/97, OJ 12/2000, 525.
  29. T 931/95, OJ 10/2001, 441.
  30. T 641/00, OJ 7/2003, 352.
  31. T 258/03, OJ 12/2004, 575.
  32. Case Law of the Boards of Appeal, page 2.
  33. T 315/03, OJ 1/2006, 15.
  34. T 315/03, Reasons 4.3.
  35. G 1/04, OJ 5/2006, 334.
  36. G 1/04, Reasons 5.2.
  37. T 388/04, OJ 1/2007, 16.
  38. T 388/04, headnote II and reasons 3.
  39. T 619/02, OJ 2/2007, 63.
  40. T 1242/04, OJ 7/2007, 421.
  41. T 154/04, OJ 2/2008, 46.
  42. T 1227/05, OJ 11/2007, 574.
  43. Special edition 6/2007 EPO Board of Appeal Case Law 2006, page 15.
  44. Case Number: G 0003/08, Opinion of the Enlarged Board of Appeal of 12 May 2010 in relation to a point of law referred by the President of the European Patent Office pursuant to Article 112(1)(b) EPC.
  45. Ian Harris (8–9 November 2012). EPO boards of appeal and key decisions: Patentability of computer-based and business-related inventions from the perspective of a patent attorney (Part 1 of 3). Munich, Germany: European Patent Office. 13:18 to 13:31 minutes in. Retrieved November 9, 2013.

Further reading

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