2.3.1 Article 123(3) EPC and Article 69 EPC
As stressed in numerous decisions with reference to G 2/88 (OJ 1990, 93), it is unnecessary when deciding on admissibility of an amendment under Art. 123(3) EPC to consider the national laws of the contracting states relating to infringement and this issue is not relevant (see e.g. T 81/03, T 547/08 and T 970/17).
In T 81/03 the board stressed that the general, abstract concern that the addition of a feature to a claim after grant led to an extended scope of protection because the resulting combination of features might give rise to a different evaluation of equivalents in infringement proceedings was not in itself a sufficient reason for not allowing the addition of limiting features under Art. 123(3) EPC 1973.
In T 547/08 the board stated that the appellant's (opponent's) arguments relating to the rights of the patent proprietor to sue for indirect or contributory infringement were not relevant to the issue of extension of the scope of protection under Art. 123(3) EPC. With respect to the question of an extension of the scope of protection under Art. 123(3) EPC, it was, rather, appropriate to take into account the fact that the protection conferred by a patent was determined by the terms of the claims, and in particular by the categories of the claims and their technical features, in accordance with Art. 69(1) EPC and its protocol (G 2/88, OJ 1990, 93). See also T 970/17 (which highlighted the difference between the "extent of the protection conferred" by a patent under Art. 69 EPC and the "rights conferred" by a patent under Art. 64 EPC).
The board in T 1832/17 likewise stressed that the scope of protection conferred by a patent within the meaning of Art. 123(3) EPC was not established by reference to the subject-matter that would be at issue in any national infringement proceedings. Art. 69(1) EPC and its Protocol stipulated that the protection conferred was determined by the terms of the claims, and in particular by the categories and technical features of those claims. Ascertaining whether an amendment extended the scope of protection thus meant comparing the granted claims with the amended ones (see also this chapter II.E.2.2).