Title: Proposed Changes in U'S' Patent Practice
1Proposed Changes in U.S. Patent Practice
Roundtable presentation Association of Patent Law
Firms February 22, 2006 Kevin E. Noonan,
Ph.D. McDONNELL BOEHNEN HULBERT BERGHOFF
www.aplf.org
2Current law 35 U.S.C. 120
- An application for patent for an invention
disclosed . . . in an application previously
filed in the United Stateswhich is filed by an
inventor or inventors named in the previously
filed application shall have the same effect . .
. as though filed on the date of the prior
application, if filed before the patenting or
abandonment of or termination of proceedings on
the first application or on an application
similarly entitled to the benefit of the filing
date of the first application and if it contains
or is amended to contain a specific reference to
the earlier filed application.
3Current practice 37 C.F.R.
- 1.53 Application number, filing date, and
completion of application. -
- (b) . . . A continuing application, which may be
a continuation, divisional, or continuation-in-par
t application, may be filed under the conditions
specified in 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c) and
1.78(a).
4Current practice 37 C.F.R.
- 1.114 Request for continued examination.
- (a) If prosecution in an application is closed,
an applicant may request continued examination of
the application by filing a submission and the
fee set forth in 1.17(e) prior to the earliest
of - (1) Payment of the issue fee, unless a petition
under 1.313 is granted - (2) Abandonment of the application or
- (3) The filing of a notice of appeal to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit under 35
U.S.C. 141, or the commencement of a civil
action under 35 U.S.C. 145 or 146, unless the
appeal or civil action is terminated.
5Proposed Changes in Practice71 Fed. Reg. 48 61
- Limit the number of continuation applications
- Limit the time to file divisional applications
- Limit the number of claims examined in an
application - Require applicants to provide search report
- Require applicants to provide a patentability
report
6Limiting Continuations
- Continuation applications limited to one as of
right - Includes Request for Continued Examination
- Additional continuations only granted by petition
to the Commissioner of Patents - For petition to be granted, applicants must show
that the amendments, evidence or argument could
not have been previously submitted
7Limiting Continuations
- Examples of situations that would qualify for
additional continuations include - in interference practice, where an Examiner/APJ
suggests that claims not corresponding to the
count be pursued in a continuing application - where data necessary to overcome a final
rejection is not previously available - a final rejection contains a new ground of
rejection that "could not have been anticipated"Â
by the applicant AND the applicant needs to
submit data not earlier available to overcome the
rejection
8Limiting Continuations
- For continuation-in-part applications, applicants
must designate for each claim whether the claim
is disclosed (under 101 and 112) in the parent
or c-i-p application - Each claim given the appropriate priority date
- Continuation applications filed from c-i-ps
entitled only to c-i-p filing date
9Limiting Divisionals
- Divisional applications permitted for all
separately-patentable inventions subject to
restriction requirement - However, to retain earliest priority date, all
divisionals must be filed during the pendency of
the originally-filed application - If not filed, subsequent divisional entitled only
to filing date of then-pending application
10Limiting Examined Claims
- Applicant required to designate up to ten (10)
claims as representative claims - Should include all independent claims
- These claims will be examined
- If found allowable, remaining dependent claims
examined for compliance with 101 and 112
11Requiring Patentability Reports
- Applicants can elect to have more than ten
representative claims examined - However, election requires applicant to
- Perform a patentability search according to PTO
searching criteria, and - Submit a patentability report distinguishing each
claim from the art cited in the search report - This will include identification of all claim
limitations found in the prior art
12Identifying related applications
- Applicants required to identify any co-pending or
co-owned patent or patent application having a
common inventor or common assignee - Requirement to be fulfilled within two months of
application filing date - These applications will be subject to
obviousness-type double patenting restrictions
13Identifying related applications
- These applications will be under a rebutable
presumption that they are patentably indistinct,
and an applicant will have to affirmatively
establish patentable distinctness or submit a
terminal disclaimer - Otherwise, the Office may merge any such claims
into a single application (presumably the
earlier-filed one).
14PTO Rationale for Changes
- Number of pending applications
- Increase in backlog of pending cases
- Excessive pendency in certain art units
- Need to increase examination quality
- Inability to solve these problems merely by
increasing size of examining corps - Changes effect small minority of cases
15Pending applications
- Presently 900,000 applications pending (20-40
continuations) - Based on new applications continuation/division
al applications allowances abandonments - Number of new applications increased by 8 in
the past 2 years - Results in a backlog of cases pending in the
office
16Excessive pendency
- Pendency issues unevenly distributed in different
art units in the PTO - Pendency times range from 28 - 52 months
- Under current circumstances (no change in
examining corps size), expected to take 36-130
months to work through the backlog
17Unsatisfactory examination quality
- Measured quantitatively by separate
re-examination (prior to Notice of Allowability) - Acceptable error rates lt 4, whereas actual error
rates are 4 8 (depending on art unit) - Adding additional, inexperienced examiners
expected to exacerbate this problem
18Increasing examining corps not enough
- PTO will hire additional 1,000 examiners in 2006
(26 increase) - New training regimen eight-month training in
special examining school - New hires will need to show proficiency before
being allowed to examine live cases - New hires will still be heavily supervised by SPEs
19Changes effect small minority of cases
- Less that 5 of all applications have more than
10 independent claims - Less than 15 of all applications have more than
one continuation/RCE - Office statistics that 23-28 of application
examinations are rework (CON CIP RCE CPA)
20Consequences
- Greater number of appeals with less
well-developed record - Increased expense related to divisional filings
- Changes in patent claim strategy
- Reduced protection for highly-complex technology
with difficult-to-predict applications - Changes the balance of power with recalcitrant
examiners
21Issues of Concern
- Characterization of certain applications as
rework - Preference given for new applications versus
recycled applications - Rule 56 implications of patent search and
patentability reports
22Issues of Concern
- Disconnect between small number of applications
affected by changes and need for these changes to
solve PTO problems - Reliance on treatment of patent matters by
academic commentators with no experience with
technology, patent practice or the PTO
23Issues of Concern
- PTO officials state that the Office does not
think it proper to keep continuations pending to
trap competitors attempts to design around
(despite CAFC approval) - PTO states that issuance of multiple patents from
one application contrary to public notice
function (contrary to PTO divisional practice)
24Does the PTO have the authority for these changes?
- 35 U.S.C. 2 Powers and duties.
- (b) SPECIFIC POWERS. The Office
-
- (2) may establish regulations, not
inconsistent with law, which - (A) shall govern the conduct of proceedings in
the Office - (B) shall be made in accordance with section
553 of title 5 - (C) shall facilitate and expedite the
processing of patent applications . . .
25PTO invites public comment
- For changes in continuation practice
- AB94comments_at_uspto.gov
- For changes in examination practice
- AB93comments_at_uspto.gov
- Deadline May 3, 2006
26Kevin E. Noonan noonan_at_mbhb.com
MBHB 300 South Wacker DriveChicago, Illinois
60606-6709312 913 0001 phone 312 913 0002
fax www.mbhb.com
www.aplf.org