Title: Patent Reform
1Patent Reform Legislative Changes on the Horizon
- Presented during the NVCA Webcast
- June 15, 2005
W. Karl Renner Principal Fish Richardson
P.C. Washington, DC Renner_at_fr.com 202-783-5070
2PATENT LAW IS EVOLVING
- Patent law is always in flux.
- The next two years promise to bring major
legislative changes to patent system.
3QUALITY A CRISIS IN THE PTO
- Backlog of over 400,000 applications
- Growing application pendency
- 2 years average - most technologies
- Project 4 years average by 2008
- Already 4 years cutting-edge electronics and
biotech inventions - Diversion of Over 650 Million of PTO User Fees
to Unrelated Programs - H.R. 1561
- Figueroa v. United States (today)
- Widespread concern about patent quality
4COST A CRISIS IN THE COURTS
- Widespread concern over abusive patent practices
- Growing backlash against patent trolls
- No effort to commercialize invention
- Waits in the shadows until someone else invests
substantial resources in a product - Demands significant licensing fee under threat of
permanent injunction - Skyrocketing costs of patent litigation
- Perversion of a system intended to promote useful
disclosure
5HARMONIZATION AN INTERNATIONAL PROBLEM
- The U.S. is the only country that recognizes
rights in the first to invent, rather than the
first to file - Most of the world allows for opposition of patent
grants on facially invalid patents, without
significant risk to the challenger not the U.S.
6SO WHAT?
- Many of your member companies are technology
companies, who either take advantage of patents
or who may be subject to the patent holdings of
others. - The time to effect desired change or to stop
undesired change is now, not after the bill has
passed.
7RESPONSE TO THE CRISIS PATENT REFORM
- PTOs The 21st Century Strategic Plan (Updated
February 2003) - Today the USPTO is under siege.
- FTC Report (October 2003)
- NAS Report (April 2004)
- AIPLA, IPO, BIO Recommendations
- Berman Bill (introduced October 2004)
- PTO Report on Inter-Partes Reexamination
(November 2004) - BSA Proposed Legislation
- House Judiciary Committee Bill (committee print
issued April 14, 2005) - Patent Reform Bill (formally introduced by
Congressman Smith on June 8, 2005)
8RESPONSE TO THE CRISIS PATENT REFORM, Contd
- FTC Report (October 2003) To promote
Innovation The Proper Balance of Competition and
Patent Law and Policy - 10 recommendations focusing on questionable
patents - NAS Report (April 2004) A Patent System for
the 21st Century - 7 recommendations focusing on the high costs of
patent litigation
9RESPONSE TO THE CRISIS PATENT REFORM, Contd
- Berman Bill H.R. 5299
- The Patent Quality Assistance Act of 2004
(introduced October 8, 2004) - Rep. Bermans remarks Consistent with the goals
and recommendations of the FTC and NAS reports,
the PQA Act contains a number of provisions
designed to improve patent quality, deter abusive
practices by unscrupulous patent holders, and
provide meaningful, low-cost alternatives to
litigation for challenging the patent validity
10RESPONSE TO THE CRISIS PATENT REFORM, Contd
- House Judiciary Committee Bill (June 8, 2005)
- Patent Act of 2005
- This bill will be debated in 109th Congress
11Where we are today
- Senate draft of Patent Reform Bill, by
Congressman Smith, was introduced last week on
June 8, 2005 - Those involved in process expecting nothing will
pass this year - Biggest stumbling block is debate over injunctive
relief, but the bill included significant
compromise on this point
1210 Legislative Hot Topics
- 1. Post-Grant Opposition
- 2. Willfulness Test
- 3. Broadening Continuations
- 4. Injunction Standard
- 5. First to File
- 6. Obviousness Standard
- 7. Presumption of Validity
- Best Mode Inequitable Conduct
- Third Party Participation in Prosecution
- 10. Damages Limitations
13Todays panel will discuss 5 of the 10 topics
mentioned earlier
- Removal of Best Mode Requirement
- First to File
- Prohibition on Broadening Continuations
- Limitations on Injunctive Relief
- Opposition (Pre-Grant and Post-Grant)
141. Best Mode Inequitable Conduct
- NAS Report Modify or remove the subjective
elements of litigation - Eliminate (a) best mode requirement and (b)
inequitable conduct - BIO supports reduces cost and increases
predictability of litigation - House Judiciary Committee Print
- Eliminates best mode (Sec. 4, p. 15)
- Drastically changes inequitable conduct!
- PTO to investigate
- To assert in court, must win on invalidity first
- Must prove by clear and convincing evidence that
patent owner committed inequitable conduct and
that but for that conduct the patent would not
have issued - Patent Reform Bill (adopts Committee Print)(Sec.
5, p. 16-37)
15Effect/Take-Aways
- Disclosure must still be enabling
- But patent laws wont force you to disclose best
trade secrets - Disclosure not as useful to the public
- Greater scope and more valuable trade secrets
- Should simplify litigation, reduce costs by
eliminating state of mind inquiry - Less opportunity to make a good jury story
162. First to File
- NAS Report advocates harmonization reforms,
including first to file. - Would brings U.S. in line with rest of the world
in adopting first to file, rather than first to
invent - First to invent system creates uncertainty,
complexity, expense and delay - Supported by AIPLA, IPO, BIO, ABA, NMA, Federal
Circuit Bar Association and small inventors - House Judiciary Committee Bill
- Agrees (specifies 12 mo. grace period for
inventors own publication). - Patent Reform Bill (Sec. 3)(pp. 2-13)
- 102(a)(2) creates first to file rule
- Exception for prior art developed using joint
research - Evaluate novelty and non-obviousness as of the
effective filing date, rather than the date of
invention
17Effect/Take-Aways
- Must file early!!!
- Fully descriptive and complete disclosure
- Could cause issues if prohibition on broadening
continuations resurfaces, as claims cant be
broadened beyond the broadest claim in the
earliest application
183. Broadening Continuations
- FTC Report Enact Legislation to Create
Intervening or Prior User Rights to Protect
Parties from Infringement Allegations That Rely
on Certain Patent Claims First Introduced in a
Continuing or Other Similar Application - Addresses opportunistic broadening of claims to
ensnare competitors products - AIPLA opposes (as written) IPO agrees
- BIO opposes. Believes existing mechanisms
adequately address illegitimate continuing
applications and it would interfere with pursuing
full claim coverage to which entitled - BSA supports. Claims in continuation applications
cannot be broader than those in parent/those
published - Not addressed by NAS or Berman Bill
- House Judiciary Committee Bill disallows claims
broader than the broadest claim first published,
issued or made in an application within 12 months - Patent Reform Bill (Sec. 8, p. 40-41)
- Removes this issue, but is it gone?
19Effect/Take-Aways
- Creates greater certainty and less risk for
existing products - Cant rely on disclosure alone to more broadly
claim later - Practitioners and well advised clients will
likely circumvent objectives of changes, but
small clients may suffer consequences
204. Injunction Standard
- BSA No injunction for party that wont be
irreparably harmed - Berman Bill Limit Injunctions Where Patentee
Does Not Practice the Invention - Eliminates presumption of irreparable harm and
automatic entitlement to an injunction - Requires finding of irreparable harm that cannot
be remedied by payment of money damages - The Court shall consider the extent to which
the patentee makes use of the technology claimed
by the patent - Bermans remarks courts should weigh all the
equities, including the unclean hands of the
patent trolls. - Bio and Pharma strongly oppose!
- House Judiciary Committee Print same as Berman
(failure to practice invention expressly recited
as a factor) - Patent Reform Bill Injunction provision changed
from Committee Print (Sec. 7, p. 40) - Language no longer expressly requires
consideration of the extent to which the patentee
practices the invention. - Rather, the Bill requires an injunction to be
stayed pending appeal, unless a stay would
irreparably harm the patentee.
214. Injunction Standard, cont.
- Federal Circuits Response Mercexchange v. eBay
(March 16, 2005) - Injunctions are not reserved for patentees who
intend to practice their patents, as opposed to
those who choose to license. The statutory right
to exclude is equally available to both groups,
and the right to an adequate remedy to enforce
that right should be equally available to both as
well. If the injunction gives the patentee
additional leverage in licensing, that is a
natural consequence of the right to exclude and
not an inappropriate reward to a party that does
not intend to compete in the marketplace with
potential infringers.
22Effect/Take-Aways
- More likely to pass on constitutional grounds
- Bill still reflects renewed emphasis on staying
injunctions, and using injunctions only when
damages will not suffice as a remedy - Like the Committee Print, this will leave
Patentee with less leverage for settlement as
Defendant will have less incentive to settle with
reduced injunction threat
235. Post-Grant Opposition
- FTC Report Enact Legislation to Create a New
Administrative Procedure to Allow Review of and
Opposition to Patents - meaningful challenges to patent validity short
of litigation - Included in Berman Bill
- Third parties can challenge patent validity in
PTO 9 mos after grant or 6 mos after threat of
infringement - No estoppel on arguments not presented or newly
discovered evidence - Final determination 1 year after filing
- Included in House Judiciary Committee Bill
- Same as Berman, except can only challenge within
9 mos after grant or reissue - Included in Patent Reform Bill (Sec. 9, pp.
41-57, see p.44) - A return to Berman provisions
- Also, one bite of the apple opposition or
reexamination on any particular issue
24Effect/Take-Aways
- Consider searching for prior art during
prosecution and directing examiner to the best
art - May decrease the number of litigations filed each
year - Less expensive and more efficient than litigation
- Reduces the burden on the courts will courts
have more time for more adequate resolutions of
other cases? - In a post-grant opposition, throw in art that is
a strong technical read, but lacks jury appeal - In a post-grant opposition, keep out art of prior
public use with strong jury appeal
25