Title: Double%20Patenting%20Simplified
1Double Patenting Simplified
- As much as possible anyway!
- Robert J. Hill, Jr.
- Quality Assurance Specialist
- Technology Center 1600
2Double Patenting in General
3What is a Double Patenting Rejection?
- Rejection of Claims
- Of common Applicant or Assignee
- Not Entitled to a Patent Because
- You already have a patent to the same invention
- Your claimed invention is an obvious variation of
the claimed invention in the patent you already
have
4The Purpose Behind the Policy
- The Constitution
- Promote the progress of science and useful arts
- Limited exclusive right in exchange for
disclosure - Benefits the public
- Double Patenting
- Prevents unjustified extension of exclusive
rights - After expiration, public should be able to
- Freely use the claimed invention
- Freely use obvious modifications of the claimed
invention
5A Graphical Representation of the Problem
Free Public Use of the Invention and
Obvious Modifications Thereof
Filing Date
Issue Date
Patent Expiration Date
Original Application
Possible Unjust Extension Of Original Patent Term
Second Application By Applicant Or Assignee
Patent Expiration Date
Filing Date
Issue Date
Free Public Use of the Invention and
Obvious Modifications Thereof
6Focus on the Claims
- Claims of the Potentially Conflicting Patent or
Application vs. Examined Claims - Use of Specification of the Potentially
Conflicting Patent or Application is Generally
Prohibited - Limited exception to be discussed more fully
later
7Types of Double Patenting Rejections
- Statutory (35 U.S.C. 101) Double Patenting
- Non-Statutory Double Patenting
- Obviousness-Type Double Patenting
- Rejection based on obviousness analysis
- Rejection based on anticipation analysis
- Non-Statutory Double Patenting Based Solely on
Improper Timewise Extension of Patent Rights
8Possible Double Patenting Situations
- Examined Application vs. Another Copending
Application (Provisional Rejection) - Examined Application vs. Issued Patent
- Examined Application vs. Published Application
(Provisional Rejection) - No need to apply this last one in an Office action
9Double Patenting and 35 U.S.C. 121
- The Third Sentence of 35 U.S.C. 121 Provides
- A patent issuing on an application with respect
to which a requirement for restriction under this
section has been made, or on an application filed
as a result of such a requirement, shall not be
used as a reference either in the Patent and
Trademark Office or in the courts against a
divisional application or against the original
application or any patent issued on either of
them, if the divisional application is filed
before the issuance of the patent on the other
application.
10Double Patenting and 35 U.S.C. 121
- MPEP 804.01
- This apparent nullification of double patenting
as a ground of rejection or invalidity in such
cases imposes a heavy burden on the Office to
guard against erroneous requirements for
restrictions where the claims define essentially
the same invention in different language and
which, if acquiesced in, might result in the
issuance of several patents for the same
invention.
11When Prohibition Under 35 U.S.C. 121 Does Not
Apply
- Two or More Applications Filed No Restriction
Requirement Made - Claims Amended Such That They Are Not
Commensurate With the Restriction Requirement - Linking Claim Practice Followed and Generic Claim
Allowed - Restriction Withdrawn
12When Prohibition Under 35 U.S.C. 121 Does Not
Apply
- Restriction (Lack of Unity) Only Made in PCT
Application - Examiner Withdraws Restriction Before Patent
Issues - Claims are Directed to Identical Subject Matter
13General Analysis
- Double Patenting Rejection Prohibited by 35
U.S.C. 121? - Statutory Basis Exists (35 U.S.C. 101)?
- Nonstatutory Basis Exists?
14Domination and Double Patenting
- Domination Broad or Generic Claims in One Patent
Fully Encompass Narrower Claims in Another Patent - Domination by Itself Cannot Support a Double
Patenting Rejection - Domination Does Not Preclude a Double Patenting
Rejection
15Statutory Double Patenting
16The Statute
- 35 U.S.C. 101
- Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful
process, machine, manufacture, or composition of
matter, or any new and useful improvement
thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to
the conditions and requirements of this title.
(Emphasis added)
17Same Invention
- Is the Same Invention Being Claimed Twice?
- Identical Subject Matter
18A Reliable Test
- Is There an Embodiment That Falls Within the
Scope of One Claim, but Not the Other? - Could One Claim be Literally Infringed Without
Literally Infringing the Other Claim?
19Statutory (35 U.S.C. 101) Double Patenting
20Statutory (35 U.S.C. 101) Double Patenting
21Non-Statutory Obviousness-Type Double Patenting
Rejection Based on Obviousness Analysis
22ODP-Obviousness Analysis
- Analogous to 35 U.S.C. 103 Analysis
- Determine the Scope and Content of the Prior
Art - Ascertain the Differences Between the Prior Art
and the Claim in Issue - Resolve the Level of Ordinary Skill in the Art
- Evaluate Evidence of Secondary Considerations
23Written Rejection
- Any Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Rejection
Based on an Obviousness Analysis Should Make
Clear - The differences between a claim in the examined
application compared to a claim in the reference
patent (or copending application) - The reasons for concluding that the invention
defined in the claim at issue would have been an
obvious variation of the invention defined in a
claim in the patent (or copending application)
24Differences Between 35 U.S.C. 103 and
ODP-Obviousness Analysis
- Prior Art
- 35 U.S.C. 103 Analysis
- Prior art within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. 102
- ODP-Obviousness Analysis
- Claims of a potentially conflicting patent or
application - Alone or with prior art within the meaning of 35
U.S.C. 102 - Reliance on specification of a potentially
conflicting patent or application is generally
prohibited - Limited exceptions
25Proper Uses of Disclosure
- Exceptions to the General Prohibition of Using
the Disclosure of a Potentially Conflicting
Patent or Application - Dictionary for claim terminology
- Portions of the disclosure which provide support
for the claims in the potentially conflicting
patent or application
26ODP-Obviousness
27ODP-Obviousness
28ODP-Obviousness
29ODP-Obviousness
30ODP-Obviousness
31ODP-Obviousness
32ODP-Obviousness
33Non-Statutory Obviousness-Type Double Patenting
Rejection Based on Anticipation Analysis
34ODP-Anticipation Situation
- Examined Claims
- Generic to (fully encompasses) a claim in the
potentially conflicting patent or application - Anticipated by the claim in the potentially
conflicting patent or application - Written Rejection
- No Graham v. Deere analysis needed
- Explain how the examined claim is anticipated
35ODP-Anticipation - !!CAUTION!!
- NOT for These Situations
- Examined claim species/subgenus of generic
claim in potentially conflicting patent or
application - Mere overlap without anticipation
- ODP-Obviousness analysis required
36ODP-Anticipation
37One-Way Obviousness
- Claim A Examined Application
- Claim B Potentially Conflicting Patent or
Application - Would Claim A Have Been Obvious Given Claim B?
38Two-Way Obviousness
- Claim A Examined Application
- Claim B Potentially Conflicting Patent or
Application - Would Claim A Have Been Obvious Given Claim B?
- Would Claim B Have Been Obvious Given Claim A?
39General Rule One-Way vs. Two-Way
- Apply One-Way Test Unless All Three Apply
- The examined application has an effective U.S.
filing date before that of a potentially
conflicting patent - There is sufficient evidence of record that the
claims could not have been filed in the same
application - There is sufficient evidence of record that there
was administrative delay on the part of the
Office in the application being examined
40Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Eli Lilly v.
Barr
41Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Eli Lilly v.
Barr
- Facts
- ODP rejection over examined claims in view of a
patent - Patent was statutorily disclaimed
- Patent owner cannot avoid double patenting by
disclaiming earlier patent - Should be Rare
- Must be Approved by TC Director
- Go to SPE first
- Then QAS
- Then TC Director
42Terminal Disclaimers
- One Avenue for Overcoming ODP Rejections
43What is a Terminal Disclaimer?
- Legal Document
- Ensures that the term for a patent granted on the
examined application will not extend past the
expiration of the term of the conflicting patent
or a patent granted on a conflicting application - Ensures common ownership between the examined
application and the conflicting patent or a
patent granted on the conflicting application
44Some Interesting Things about Terminal Disclaimers
- It must operate with respect to all claims in
the patent. - It is not an admission of the propriety of the
rejection. - It is effective only with respect to the
application identified in the disclaimer, unless
by its terms it extends to continuing
applications. - Effective with respect to each application having
the identified application number
45Some Interesting Things about Terminal Disclaimers
- A terminal disclaimer fee is required for each
terminal disclaimer filed. - A terminal disclaimer is required even in
applications filed on or after June 8, 1995 - as a result of patent term adjustment provisions
patents and conflicting claims would not
necessarily expire on the same day - even if patents with conflicting claims would
expire on the same day, ensuring enforceability
only as long as they are commonly owned is still
required
46How to Overcome a Proper Double Patenting
Rejection
- Statutory (35 U.S.C. 101) Double Patenting
- Amend the claim(s)
- Cancel the claim(s)
- A terminal disclaimer is NOT sufficient to
overcome such a rejection - Declarations under 37 CFR 1.131 are NOT
sufficient to overcome such a rejection
47How to Overcome a Proper Double Patenting
Rejection
- Non-Statutory Double Patenting (All Types)
- Amend the claim(s)
- Cancel the claim(s)
- File a proper terminal disclaimer
- Declarations under 37 CFR 1.131 are NOT
sufficient to overcome such a rejection
48Double Patenting vs. Art Rejection
- Double Patenting
- Compares claims
- With limited use of the disclosure of the
potentially conflicting patent or application - Can be overcome by a terminal disclaimer (ODP
only) - TD removes potential harm to public
49Double Patenting vs. Art Rejection
- Art Rejection
- Reference used for all it fairly teaches
- Cannot be overcome with a terminal disclaimer
50Form Paragraphs
- See Pages 19-30 of the Training Materials
- See also the section Suggested Language for
Clarifying Basis for Rejection on page 12 - See the examples for sample rejections
- Do Not Forget to Read the Examiner Notes for the
Form Paragraphs - The Examiner Notes may provide information as
to other appropriate rejections
51Flow Chart
- Page 32 of the Training Materials
52Example 1
- 09/123,123, Filed 01/01/02
- Claim 1 Protein
- Claim 2 DNA encoding the protein
- Restricted between claims 1-2
- Elected claim 2, cancelled claim 1
- Issued 6/1/02
- 09/234,234, Filed 4/1/02
- Divisional of 09/123,123
- Claim 1 Protein (same as original claim 1 of
09/123,123) - Claim 1 rejected under ODP over the DNA claim of
issued parent
53Example 1
- ODP Rejection NOT PROPER
- 35 U.S.C. 121 prohibits the rejection because of
the restriction in the parent application
54Example 2
- Examined Application (Inventor A)
- Claim 1. A shampoo composition comprising water,
a moisturizer, a surface-active agent, and a dye. - Patent 8,500,000 (Inventors A and B)
- Issued less than one before the examined
application - Claim 37. A composition comprising water, a
surfactant, a dye, and a moisturizer wherein the
composition is useful as a shampoo. - No Claimed Benefit to Patent
- No Restriction Made
55Example 2
- Statutory (35 U.S.C. 101) Double Patenting is
Appropriate - Rejection Under 35 U.S.C. 102(e) Would Also Be
Appropriate
56Example 2 (Modifications)
- Patent Issued More Than One Year Before the
Effective Filing Date of the Application - Statutory double patenting still appropriate
- 102(b) rejection would also be appropriate
- No Common Inventor or Assignee
- 102(e) rejection would be appropriate
- If overcome - interference
57Example 3
- Examined Application (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 1. A compound having the following formula
- R1-(CH2CH2)n-R2
- wherein R1 is alky, alkyoxy, or hydroxy, R2 is
cycloalkyl, unsubstituted phenyl, or substituted
phenyl, and n is 1-10. - Patent 8,500,000 (Inventors A and B)
- Filed before but issued after the effective
filing date of the examined application - Claim 10. A compound having the following
formula CH3OCH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2-Phenyl or
CH3OCH2CH2CH2CH2-Phenyl. - Benefit to Patent Claimed
- No Restriction Made
58Example 3
- Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Anticipation
Analysis Appropriate
59Example 4
- Examined Application (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 1. A method of treating high blood pressure
in a patient in need thereof comprising
administering to the patient an aqueous solution
of compound X wherein the aqueous solution
includes a thickener in an amount such that the
aqueous solution has a viscosity of 50-80
centipoise at 37 oC. - Patent 8,500,000 (Inventors A and B)
- Filed before but issued after the effective
filing date of the examined application - Claim 20. A method of treating high blood
pressure in a patient in need thereof comprising
administering to the patient an aqueous solution
of compound X. - CIP Benefit to Patent Claimed
- No Restriction Made
60Example 4
- Specification of 8,500,000
- The aqueous solution of compound X can be
administered by various routes including,
subcutaneous, intravenous, and oral. - Hill et al
- More than one year before the effective filing
date of the application - Better results are obtained from drugs that are
administered subcutaneously - When the viscosity of the composition is 50-60
centipoise at 37oC - Better drug availability at the disclosed
viscosity - Viscosity can be adjusted using thickening
agents.
61Example 4
- Examined Application (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 1. A method of treating high blood pressure
in a patient in need thereof comprising
administering to the patient an aqueous solution
of compound X wherein the aqueous solution
includes a thickener in an amount such that the
aqueous solution has a viscosity of 50-80
centipoise at 37 oC. - Patent 8,500,000 (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 20. A method of treating high blood
pressure in a patient in need thereof comprising
administering to the patient an aqueous solution
of compound X. - Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Obviousness
Analysis Appropriate
62Example 4 (Modifications)
- Patent and Hill et al Issued More Than One Year
Before the Effective Filing Date of the
Application - 103 rejection would also be appropriate
- Obviousness-type double patenting still
appropriate - Not necessary overcoming 103 rejection would
overcome ODP rejection - No Common Inventor or Assignee
- 102(e)/103 rejection would be appropriate
- If overcome - interference
63Example 6
- Examined Application (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 1. A method of making compound C comprising
reacting compound A with compound B in aqueous
solution at a temperature from 50oC to 90oC. - Patent 8,500,000 (Inventors A and B)
- Filed before but issued after the effective
filing date of the examined application - Claim 70. A method of making compound C
comprising reacting compound A with compound B in
aqueous solution at a temperature from 80oC to
150oC. - Discloses several examples wherein the reaction
is carried out at 80oC, 90oC, 100oC, 110oC,
120oC, 130oC, 140oC, and 150oC - CIP Benefit to Patent Claimed
- No Restriction Made
64Example 6
- Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Obviousness
Analysis Appropriate
65Example 6 (Modification)
- Examined Application (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 1. A method of making compound C comprising
reacting compound A with compound B in aqueous
solution at a temperature from 50oC to 90oC. - Patent 8,500,000 (Inventors A and B)
- Claim 70. A method of making compound C
comprising reacting compound A with compound B in
aqueous solution at a temperature from 40oC to
150oC. - Discloses several examples wherein the reaction
is carried out at 80oC, 90oC, 100oC, 110oC,
120oC, 130oC, 140oC, and 150oC - Obviousness-Type Double Patenting Obviousness
Analysis Appropriate - Using specifically disclosed embodiments (80oC
and 90oC) that support the temperature range in
claim 70
66The End