Source: http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2019/12/proving-existence-of-confidentiality.html?showComment=1576141026705
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Proving the existence of confidentiality agreements and the celestial teapot - T 2037/18 - The IPKat
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Proving the existence of confidentiality agreements and the celestial teapot - T 2037/18
Rose Hughes Monday, December 09, 2019 - BA case law, Board of Appeal, Board of Appeal 3.2.01, Boards of Appeal, Bombardier, burden of proof, epo, patents, philosophy, proving a negative, Rose Hughes, Siemens, T 1299/15
T 2037/18 is an EPO Boards of Appeal case that considers how much an opponent needs to prove in the Notice of Opposition itself. The case related to a dispute between Bombardier and Siemens regarding Bombardier’s EP patent (EP2619063) for a train carriage. Siemens cited a train (the TDR Series 460) as prior art against the patent, alleging prior use by Bombardier’s customer Transregio Deutsche Regionalbahn (TDR). The case centred around whether the transfer of the train from Bombardier to TDR could be considered to have taken place under conditions of confidentiality. Crucial questions in the case were a) on which party the burden of proof should be laid and b) whether this burden was on the opponent in the Notice of Opposition. Another key question was whether the burden of proof placed on Siemens in opposition had been the equivalent of asking them to prove a negative (or more philosophically speaking, had it been like asking the opponent to prove the existence of the philosophical "celestial teapot").
The Opposition Division (OD) did not consider the information provided by Siemens on the TDR 460 train to be enough to substantiate the opposition. The OD particularly considered that the process of transfer between Bombardier and TDR should be considered as having taken place under conditions of implied confidentiality. The OD thus found that the burden of proof had been on Siemens to demonstrate the lack of such conditions of confidentiality between Bombardier and TDR in the Notice of Opposition. In the absence of any such proof the opposition was considered inadmissible.
The appeal case explored the issue of whether the burden of proof really should be viewed as resting with the opponent in such a case.
Legal Background – Prior use and burden of proof
The public use of an invention prior to the priority date of a patent may be novelty destroying (Article 54(2) EPC). The approach of the UK courts to the issue of prior public use was considered by the High Court earlier this year (IPKat: Mr Justice Nugee and the Superhose: The potentiality of disclosure). The EPO and UK courts agree that an invention is judged to have been made available to the public even if only one member of the public was able to gain access to and understand the disclosure (T 0084/83). A rear-view mirror was considered by the EPO to have been disclosed, for example, because it was used in a public transport vehicle. However, a prior use disclosure is not considered public if it took place under conditions of confidentiality (T 1081/01).
In EPO proceedings, arguments such as an allegation of prior use must be supported by facts and evidence (as recently reviewed in another Boards of Appeal case, see IPKat: Shifting the burden of proof back to the patentee (T 1299/15)). In a case of alleged prior public use, the burden of proof is on the opponent to substantiate the when, what, and how of the public use (Case Law of the Boards of Appeal, I.C.3.2.4).
The burden of proof should not amount to proving a negative
So who had the burden of proof in Siemen’s opposition of Bombardier’s patent (T 2037/18)? The Board (3.2.01) noted the Boards of Appeal case law that, if prior use is alleged, the burden of proof first falls on the opponent to demonstrate that the sale took place (T 326/93, r. 4.1). In particular, the when, what and by whom of the alleged prior use must be outlined by the opponent. The Board noted that this evidence had been provided in the Notice of Opposition. The question of whether the prior use had been public (i.e. whether it had been confidential) was considered irrelevant for the admissibility of the appeal. Such a question should be left to the assessment of the substantive merits of the case. The Board therefore considered the opposition to have been admissible.
The Board further noted that, in general, if the patentee argues in their defence that a prior use was confidential, the burden of proof is on the patentee to prove that conditions of confidentiality were, in fact, in place (T 221/91, r. 2). The shift of the burden of proof to the patentee is considered appropriate given that a buyer can typically be expected to disclose an item they have bought. As Siemens argued, TDR would have had a strong interest in using the train. TDR would also have assumed Bombardier to have made the arrangements for patent protection if any were necessary. As the Board put it “[a] search of the entire body of the Board of Appeal has not revealed a case, in which a chamber from the delivery of a rail vehicle to an operating company would have concluded the existence of a tacit confidentiality agreement” (r. 17, machine translation).
The Board further considered this reasoning to follow the legal principle of “negative non sunt probanda”, i.e. you can’t prove a negative. This Kat is reminded of Bertrand’s Russell’s analogy of the “celestial teapot”. Russell argued that if a party was to allege the existence of a small teapot orbiting the earth (where the teapot is too small to be spotted by telescopes) it would be impossible for another party to disprove the claim. Russell used this analogy to argue that the burden of proof must lie on the party making the unfalsifiable claim.
In the case of prior use, the Board argued, an opponent cannot be expected to prove that the sale didn’t take place under conditions of confidentiality. Such a requirement would require the opponent to prove a negative. The burden of proof would thus amount to the same as would be required to disprove the existence of the celestial teapot.
Burden of proof may shift again in view of prima facie evidence. For example, if a patentee presents what appears to be prima facie evidence of conditions of confidentiality covering a prior use, the burden of proof shifts to the opponent to disprove this evidence (r.10). However, the Board noted that such a shift in the burden of proof could only be triggered after the Notice of Opposition had been filed, i.e. in view of the patentee’s response to the opposition. The Board (obviously a fan of a pertinent Latin phrase), summarised that a shift in the burden of proof with respect to the existence of a confidentiality agreement could only occur ex nunc.
The reasoning provided in this decision is welcome, especially in light of the upcoming changes to the Rules of Procedure of the Boards of Appeal (RPBA) (see IPKat here). Under the new regime it will become significantly harder to introduce new arguments and evidence into proceedings as proceedings progress. Commentators are predicting that opponents and patentees will front load their cases in response to the revised changes. T 2037/18 provides some salient reasoning why it should not be required of an opponent to introduce all possible arguments and counter-arguments in the Notice of Opposition. The Opponent must also be able to respond to the patentee's position as proceedings progress.
Proving the existence of confidentiality agreements and the celestial teapot - T 2037/18 Reviewed by Rose Hughes on Monday, December 09, 2019 Rating: 5
T 1299/15
Quick but incorrect decision of the OD Thursday, 12 December 2019 at 08:57:00 GMT
One should not forget that if an opposition division decides not to admit an opposition, it does not have to discuss any substantive matter like added matter, insufficiency, novelty or inventive step.
In the present case the OD jumped at the gun, and it has to be agreed that the actual discussion on the value of the proof given is a matter of substance or whether the opposition is well founded and not merely of admissibility.
That the drawings bore a stamp confidential is not surprising, but what matters is that the corresponding element was made available to the public. One can expect that after two years of service the whole system was made available to the public, and that confidentiality was not any longer present, even if it had been implicit, which remains a mere allegation of the proprietor and of the division.
It is thus correct to say that should Bombardier wanted to claim confidentiality, then it bears the burden of proof. Bombardier did not deny the public prior use, as this would not have been plausible.
The decision is however to be welcomed as it clarifies important issues with respect to the onus of proof.
I do not consider that Art 12(4) NRPBA would change anything in the present situation. Siemens could not bring anything more than it had brought up to then, so that even present Art 12(4) RPBA would not apply.
T 0426/08 is another decision in which the OD confused admissibility and being well-founded.
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