Tuesday 1 June 2010

T 1726/08 – What Does Cross-Check Mean?


[12] In accordance with A 122(1), an applicant shall have his rights re-established upon request if he was unable to observe a time limit vis-à-vis the EPO “in spite of all due care required by the circumstances having been taken”. Where the applicant has authorised a professional representative to represent itself before the EPO, the due care requirement applies to the professional representative (see, e.g., decision J 3/93 of [2]). It is the established case law of the Boards of Appeal that this due care requirement is fulfilled if the non-compliance with the time limit results from an isolated mistake within a normally satisfactory system for monitoring time limits (see, e.g., decision T 428/98 [3.3]). The systems used for the monitoring of time limits may include the use of specialised computer systems or software. However, whether any system fulfils the requirement of the taking of “all due care” depends on the individual circumstances of each case (see, e.g., decision T 902/05 [6]).

[13) To qualify as a “normally satisfactory” time monitoring system, the case law has established that such system needs to include an independent cross-check which could, for example, be implemented through a check by a third person (i.e., neither the representative nor his or her assistant) near the due date whether or not an action listed in the time monitoring system has been performed (e.g. decisions T 828/94 [2], T 1465/07 [19]). Only in cases where the representative is working in a small unit or firm, a system without such cross-check mechanism may be satisfactory for A 122(1) (e.g., decision T 428/98 [3.5]). Since the representative’s firm employed some 40 attorneys at four locations, such exception for small firms/units cannot apply in the present case.

[14] The time monitoring system used by the representative and his assistants was exclusively based on the software “Patricia”. After the decision under appeal was notified to the representative, the term no. 670 associated with the status text “Refusal by patent office, external due date” and the required action “shall the refusal be appealed?” was entered into the system on 21 April 2008, together with the next due date of 18 June 2008. These text entries, which could be viewed by the person operating “Patricia”, appeared partially on the personal term lists of the attorney and his assistants, i.e., only the action texts appeared. The text did not change until the term was actively acknowledged by the person operating “Patricia” and therefore not until the required action had been performed before or on the due date.

[15] The board considers it relevant that term no. 670 and its text entries reminded of the due date for filing an appeal but did not contain any separate reference to the payment of an appeal fee. On the other hand, the board finds it irrelevant that the standard text entries (terms) could, if necessary, manually be changed or replaced by the person operating “Patricia” as such modification of the term was not part of the standard procedure at the firm and was not effectuated in the present case.

[16] The action text “shall the refusal be appealed?” in term no. 670 may be understood as implicitly referring to two actions; filing of the notice of appeal and payment of the appeal fee. Indeed, the appellant argued that the representative knew about the requirement to pay the appeal fee within the time limit for filing the notice of appeal and that the assistant regularly cross-checked that all formal requirements were fulfilled as provided by the action to which the submission was in reply. The appellant argued that said cross-check performed by the assistant constitutes a cross-check as required by the case law.

[17] The representative’s knowledge and the assistant’s checking the appealed decision before the appeal is filed is not what in the case law is considered as a reliable reminder that the fee payment requirement is fulfilled. On the one hand, the legal knowledge of the representative cannot be considered to be part of a reminder system if it has not materialised as concrete action-specific information recorded in a paper-based or software-based information system. On the other hand, it is not adequate to rely on the assistant’s check for formal requirements if an entire procedural step, the payment of the appeal fee, cannot be monitored separately (see point [15] above).

[18] The board notes furthermore in this context that the decision under appeal (like any decision refusing a European patent application) did not include any explicit reference to the appeal fee. The standard text accompanying the appealed decision mentioned that the decision was open to appeal, and referred to A 106 to A 108. Only by looking up A 108, second sentence, the representative’s assistant could have read and be reminded that the filing of the notice of appeal had to be accompanied by the payment of the appeal fee.

[19] The board concludes that the information that the appeal fee had to be paid before or on the due date for the listed action was not compelling from the “Patricia” term no. 670 for the persons involved in the prosecution of the file at the firm, taking into account that said term did not contain any explicit reference to the appeal fee and that said term was not accompanied by any other reminder (such as a separate term) related to the appeal fee. Consequently, the personal term lists available before the filing of the notice of appeal could not reliably remind the representative and his assistant of the necessity to pay the appeal fee.

[20] The appellant argued that the standard procedure at the representative’s firm also involved a second crosscheck as required by the case law for a “normally satisfactory” reminder system. After the representative and his assistant had reacted to the entry in the term list and the notice of appeal had been signed by the representative, the assistant performed the next step in the standard procedure by closing term no. 670 and thereby adding term no. 680 in “Patricia”. Only after this change, an explicit reference to the appeal fee appeared for the first time in the system (“Formal appeal and appeal fee sent to patent office” / “request new due date”). As, according to the appellant, term no. 680 is only relevant for proceedings before the Swedish Patent Office, the representative’s assistant immediately acknowledged term no. 680 by clicking “OK”, thereby triggering term no. 681 with the action text “file complete appeal” and a reference to the next action due date 18 August 2008.

[21] However, these steps cannot be considered as a crosscheck, i.e. a back-up of a first reminder. Firstly, there was no first reminder of the due date for the fee payment. In fact, the described interactions with “Patricia” were performed by the representative’s assistant only. The representative himself, when consulting his updated term list, could not see any reference to the fee payment even after the terms had been changed because the term lists only showed the relevant action text (“file complete appeal”).

[22] The assistant was presented, only after having processed the notice of appeal and performed the first term change, the changed status text “Formal appeal and appeal fee sent to patent office”. However, the system did not require the assistant to confirm separately the filing of the notice of appeal and the payment of the appeal fee. The assistant was only required to confirm the next action “request new due date”, which was not applicable in the EPO proceedings, in order to trigger the next term with a maintained status text and a new action text “file complete appeal”. Under these circumstances, the assistant’s attention was not drawn properly to the necessity to pay the appeal fee, said necessity being a legal requirement per se.

[23] The representative’s involvement ended after signing the notice of appeal […]. He was not involved and was not supposed to be involved in the described “Patricia” updating process. Unlike a person actively operating Patricia, he could therefore not see the status message containing the reference to the fee payment. The fact that only the representative’s assistant, operating Patricia, could have been reminded of the required fee payment means that the cross-check, if the term changes in Patricia were to be considered a cross-check at all, was not independent.

[24] In the board’s judgment, a software-based time monitoring system that does not explicitly remind of the required payment of the appeal fee (an action distinct from the filing of the notice of appeal) on any to-do-list or term list before and after the due date for such payment and only refers to the payment in a status text after the notice of appeal is signed (when the time-monitoring system is updated by the representative’s assistant) is inadequate to monitor the timely payment of the appeal fees.

[25] The appellant further referred to four other appeals that had been filed by the professional representatives at the representative’s firm during the last five years without any fee payment issues […). The board notes that evidence for the efficient operating of a monitoring system during many years may weigh in favour of a finding of a normally satisfactory character but will be counterbalanced by evidence that main features of such a character, such as an independent cross-check, go missing (see decision T 1465/07 [19]).

[26] The appellant has further argued that according to decision T 1465/07, the principle of proportionality requires that the due care requirement pursuant to A 122 must not be interpreted in an excessive manner. In this respect, the board concurs with the finding in the referred to decision T 1465/07 [19] where it was held that the requirement of an independent cross-check was not disproportionate.

[27] For the sake of completeness, the board notes that even if the knowledge of the representative of the requirement to pay the appeal fee and the regular checking of the formal requirements by the assistant, together with the acknowledgement by the assistant of the status text referring to the completed payment, was considered a normally satisfactory system for the monitoring of the time limits for paying the appeal fee, the time monitoring system as operated in the representative’s firm failed in two respects.

Firstly, the representative’s assistant who was finalising the notice of appeal failed to submit a payment instruction (EPO Form 1010) to the representative.

Secondly, the representative signed the notice of appeal without realising that the notice of appeal should be accompanied by a payment instruction. Two mistakes cannot be considered an isolated error in a normally satisfactory system (see decision T 808/03 [2.2]).

[28] For the reasons set forth above, the time limit monitoring system used in the present case did not qualify as a normally satisfactory system. The due care requirement of A 122(1) was not met.

Consequently, the appellant’s request for reestablishment of rights has to be refused.

To read the whole decision, please click here.

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