CLR II D 3.2 Claiming in the subsequent application the invention disclosed in the previous application

The features of the invention disclosed in the priority application must also characterise the invention claimed in the subsequent application.

In T 1050/92 the disclosure of the invention in the earlier application provided an adequate basis for replacing the term "Flüssigkeitsabscheidezyklon" used in said application with the more general one "Luft/Flüssigkeits-Trenneinrichtung" in claim 1 of the European application.

In T 809/95, the opponents submitted that the "thin-walled" feature, which was disclosed in the first priority application as essential, was not contained in granted claim 1. The board was of the opinion that granted claim 1 was based on a "collapsible" plastic bottle "produced by the blow-moulding method" which had folds "to facilitate a reduction of volume upon the exertion of a pressure applied to the walls by hand". This description in itself implied that the bottle would have to be made from thin-walled plastic flexible enough to be collapsible by hand when empty, as required by independent claim 3 in the first priority application.

In T 515/00 the appellant had argued that features pertaining to hardware components relating to the printing process were no longer present in the claim and that there was no basis in the priority document for the deletion of these features. The board referred to G 2/98 (OJ 2001, 413, point 8.3 of the Reasons), in which the Enlarged Board had warned against an approach whereby a distinction was made between technical features which were related to the function and the effect of the invention and technical features which were not. Priority could not be acknowledged if a feature was modified or deleted, or a further feature was added. The board further noted that a claim passed the priority test if its subject-matter could be derived from the previous application as a whole. It followed that comparing the claim with the corresponding claim of the previous application was not a valid approach to performing the "priority test". The priority test was basically a disclosure test in which the skilled reader could use common general knowledge. If, in the description of the previous application, a distinction was made between features that were essential for the performance of the invention and features which were not, the latter could be deleted from the subject-matter of a claim without losing the right to priority. The omitted hardware components were nowhere presented as essential features in the priority document's description. The skilled reader would not have any reason to assume that they were essential merely because they were present in claim 1 of the priority document. The board concluded that the priority claimed was valid. This decision was followed in T 321/06.

According to the board in T 134/94, granted claim 1 was not entitled to priority. The priority document disclosed a process which worked under specific conditions indicated as features (a) to (d). Requirements (a) and (c) did not appear in granted claim 1; the invention defined by it was not the same as that defined in the priority document. According to the board, the respondent's position that the priority claim should be acknowledged whenever the disclosure of the priority document would destroy the novelty of the claims of the later application or patent ("novelty test") had no basis either in the EPC or in the EPO case law.

In T 552/94 the patent's claim 1 lacked four features which according to the priority document were indispensable for carrying out the invention. Citing T 134/94 and T 1082/93, the board found that without those features the invention according to claim 1 could not be the same as that described in the priority document, and the requirements of Art. 87(1) EPC 1973 were therefore not met.

In T 59/11 the board, assessing the requirement of the "same invention" according to the criteria of G 2/98 (OJ 2001, 413), concluded that there was no basis in the priority document as a whole for the omission of features (a) to (d) from claim 1 in question. Rejecting arguments put forward by the proprietor, the board stated that the existence of a common problem to be solved in a claim under consideration and the document from which its priority was claimed was not decisive in finding a priority validly claimed or not. Nor was an identification of features which were not essential to solving this common problem and their deletion an accepted approach to justify a valid priority claim.

According to T 250/12, following G 2/98 (OJ 2001, 413, points 8.3 and 9 of the Reasons), the essentiality of a feature is not per se an appropriate criterion for judging the validity of a priority claim. Applying the standard laid down in G 2/98 for assessing the "same invention" requirement, the board noted that each of the independent claims of the first priority application contained the contested feature relating to the adjacent location of the third and second contact portions (or their corresponding terminals or apparatus side terminals). Moreover, the priority application as a whole did not provide any basis for considering the above feature as optional. Thus, a skilled person would immediately deduce from the first priority application that the feature formed part of the invention disclosed therein. Since this feature was deleted from the present independent claims, the subject-matter of those claims could not be clearly and unambiguously derived from the first priority application, and the claimed priority was not valid.

See also e.g. T 1890/09.

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Case Law Book: II Conditions to be met by an Application

Case Law of the Enlarged Board

General Case Law