Anticipation II Patent Law – Prof Merges 2.12.08.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
By David W. Hill AIPLA Immediate Past President Partner Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP Overview of the America Invents Act.
Advertisements

Incorporation by Reference
Michael Neas Supervisor Office of PCT Legal Administration
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION OFFICE OF PATENT COUNSEL March 16, 2001.
Patent Strategy Under the AIA Washington in the West January 29, 2013.
Implementing First-Inventor-to-File Provisions of the AIA By: Scott D. Malpede, Seth Boeshore and Chitra Kalyanaraman USPTO Rules Effective March 16, 2013.
AIPPI Forum & ExCo in Hyderabad (India) October 2011 Inventorship in Multi-Jurisdictions Report from China.
INTRODUCTION TO PATENT RIGHTS The Business of Intellectual Property
1 1 1 AIPLA American Intellectual Property Law Association Standard for Indefiniteness– Nautilus, Inc. v. Biosig Instruments, Inc. Stephen S. Wentsler.
UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE A full transcript of this presentation can be found under the “Notes” Tab. Claim Interpretation: Broadest Reasonable.
Novelty II – Old an New Patent Law Prof Merges
The America Invents Act (AIA) - Rules and Implications of First to File, Prior Art, and Non-obviousness -
September 14, U.S.C. 103(c) as Amended by the Cooperative Research and Technology Enhancement (CREATE) Act (Public Law ) Enacted December.
35 U.S.C. 112, Sixth Paragraph MPEP 2181 – 2186 Jean Witz Quality Assurance Specialist Technology Center 1600.
Filing Compliant Reexam Requests Andy Kashnikow SPE, Central Reexamination Unit Andy Kashnikow SPE, Central Reexamination Unit June, 2010.
Prosecution Group Luncheon Patents August Proposed First-To-File Rules Add definitions in AIA to Rules Declarations for removing references based.
Intellectual Property March 4, 2015 Don Keach Director, Intellectual Property Development and Technology Transfer Office Copyright University of Kentucky.
Patents Copyright © Jeffrey Pittman. Pittman - Cyberlaw & E- Commerce 2 Legal Framework of Patents The U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 8:
Greg H. Gardella Ex Parte and Inter Partes Reexamination Tactics AIPLA 2010 Winter Institute.
Patent Term Adjustment (Bio/Chem. Partnership) Kery Fries, Sr. Legal Advisor Phone: (571)
35 USC § 102(f) “A person shall be entitled to a patent unless – * * * (f) He did not himself invent the subject matter sought to be patented.
3 rd party statutory bar activity Patent Law
Novelty: What’s New? Plenty! Patent Law Prof Merges
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School February 16, 2007 Patent - Novelty.
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School February 27, 2008 Patent - Enablement.
Co-inventorship/Ownership Prof Merges 5/1/08. Co-inventorship/Ownership In the first instance, the inventor is the owner Co-inventors are therefore, in.
Novelty and Statutory Bars Intro to IP Prof Merges –
Patent Overview by Jeff Woller. Why have Patents? Patents make some people rich – but, does that seem like something the government should protect? Do.
Novelty Beyond 102(a) Patent Law Prof Merges
Novelty: What’s New? Patent Law Prof Merges
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School February 16, 2009 Patent – Novelty.
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School February 14, 2007 Patent - Utility.
The U.S. Patent System is Changing – A Summary of the New Patent Reform Law.
The America Invents Act: Eighteen Months Post-Enactment Janet Gongola Patent Reform Coordinator March 27, 2013.
December 8, Changes to Patent Fees Under the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005 (H.R. 4818)(upon enactment) and 35 U.S.C. 103(c) as Amended by.
Utility Requirement in Japan Makoto Ono, Ph.D. Anderson, Mori & Tomotsune Website:
Patent Protection Around the World & at the USPTO
An invention is a unique or novel device, method, composition or process. It may be an improvement upon a machine or product, or a new process for creating.
Protect Your Patents from Inequitable Conduct Charges July 22, 2010.
Impact of US AIA: What Really Changed? 1 © AIPLA 2015.
Who can file? Inventor Assignee of Inventor Legal Representative of Inventor or Assignee.
Professor Peng  Patent Act (2008) ◦ Promulgated in 1984 ◦ Amended in 1992, 2000, and 2008.
1 Patent Law in the Age of IoT The Landscape Has Shifted. Are You Prepared? 1 Jeffrey A. Miller, Esq.
The Patent Document II Class Notes: January 23, 2003 Law 677 | Patent Law | Spring 2003 Professor Wagner.
Patents III Novelty and Loss of Rights Class 13 Notes Law 507 | Intellectual Property | Spring 2004 Professor Wagner.
Overcoming Prior Art References Non-Enabling Prior Art References Gary Kunz SPE Art Unit 1616.
July 18, U.S.C. 103(c) as Amended by the Cooperative Research and Technology Enhancement (CREATE) Act (Public Law ) Enacted December 10,
Novelty II – Old an New Patent Law Prof Merges
1 Written Description Analysis and Capon v. Eshhar Jeffrey Siew Supervisory Patent Examiner AU 1645 USPTO (571)
Grace Period System under AIA vs. Exception to Loss of Novelty in Japan JPAA International Activities Center Kazuhiro Yamaguchi January 29, 2013 AIPLA.
New Sections 102 & 103 (b) Conditions for Patentability- (1) IN GENERAL- Section 102 of title 35, United States Code, is amended to read as follows: -`Sec.
Side 1 Andrew Chin AndrewChin.com A Quick Survey of the America Invents Act Patent Law October 12, 2011.
1 Demystifying the Examination of Stem Cell-Related Inventions Remy Yucel, Ph.D. Supervisory Patent Examiner Technology Center 1600 United States Patent.
Prior Art  What is prior art?  Prior art = certain types of knowledge defined by 102(a)-(g) that may operate to defeat patentability or invalidate a.
Derivation Proceedings Gene Quinn Patent Attorney IPWatchdog.com March 27 th, 2012.
Double Patenting Deborah Reynolds SPE Art Unit 1632 Detailee, TC1600 Practice Specialist
The Novelty Requirement II Class Notes: February 4, 2003 Law 677 | Patent Law | Spring 2003 Professor Wagner.
Novelty: What’s New? Plenty! Patent Law Prof Merges
Class 7: Novelty Patent Law Spring 2007 Professor Petherbridge.
The Impact of Patent Reform on Independent Inventors and Start-up Companies Mark Nowotarski (Patent Agent)
Nuts and Bolts of Patent Law presented by: Shamita Etienne-Cummings April 5, 2016.
PATENT OFFICE PROSECUTION
Preparing a Patent Application
Loss of Right Provisions
The Novelty Requirement I
Ram R. Shukla, Ph.D. SPE AU 1632 & 1634 Technology Center
Nuts and Bolts of Patent Law
Global Innovation Management Workout on Writing a Patent
Preparing a Patent Application
Presentation transcript:

Anticipation II Patent Law – Prof Merges

Agenda Finish 102(a) – Klopfenstein, Hafner Section 102(e) – Inventive entities Section 102(f)

In re Klopfenstein 380 F.3d 1345 (Fed Cir 2004) “Printed Publications” for the modern era.. Page 405

In October 1998, the appellants, along with colleague M. Liu, presented a printed slide presentation entitled "Enhancement of Cholesterol-Lowering Activity of Dietary Fibers By Extrusion Processing" at a meeting of the American Association of Cereal Chemists ("AACC"). The fourteen-slide presentation was printed and pasted onto poster boards. The printed slide presentation was displayed continuously for two and a half days at the AACC meeting.

AACC 1998 Annual Meeting Poster # 127. Click title to see full text of poster. Enhancement of cholesterol-lowering activity of dietary fibers by extrusion processing. M. LIU, C.F. Klopfenstein, and J.L. Brent. Department of Grain Science and Industry, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506

The statutory phrase "printed publication" has been interpreted to mean that before the critical date the reference must have been sufficiently accessible to the public interested in the art; dissemination and public accessibility are the keys to the legal determination whether a prior art reference was "published.“ -- p. 406

Billboard hypothetical: p. 406 “’public accessibility’ has been called the touchstone in determining whether a reference constitutes a ‘printed publication,’” In re Hall – NOT just indexing “The reference was shown with no stated expectation that the information would not be copied or reproduced by those viewing it.”

The factors relevant to the facts of this case are: the length of time the display was exhibited, the expertise of the target audience, the existence (or lack thereof) of reasonable expectations that the material displayed would not be copied, and the simplicity or ease with which the material displayed could have been copied.

Where professional and behavioral norms entitle a party to a reasonable expectation that the information displayed will not be copied, we are more reluctant to find something a "printed publication." This reluctance helps preserve the incentive for inventors to participate in academic presentations or discussions. Where parties have taken steps to prevent the public from copying temporarily posted information, the opportunity for others to appropriate that information … is reduced. -- p. 409

35 USC Sec. 120 US Implementation of international “Paris Convention” for patent priority (1890) ( Preserves US priority based on foreign priority filing “National Treatment” principle

Agenda Finish 102(a) – Klopfenstein, Hafner Section 102(e) – Inventive entities Section 102(f)

Alexander Milburn Whitford Filed Issued: Clifford Filed: Issued:

Why would anyone disclose but not claim an invention?

Related field Interested only in one application Oversight

Holmes’ reasoning Note emphasis on who was “prior inventor” Is that how we would view it today?

Holmes’ reasoning Note emphasis on who was “prior inventor” Is that how we would view it today? NO! Two separate issues – Is Whitford’s patent anticipated by Clifford reference? – VS. Who has “priority”

What would make this a priority case?

Whitford and Clifford would have to CLAIM the same subject matter!

Alexander Milburn Codified in Section 102(e): No patent if – (e) Invention was DESCRIBED [but NOT claimed] in... (2) a patent granted on an application for patent by another filed in the US before the [date of] invention

Back to Holmes... “Plain meaning” approach – Good starting point – Followed Here?

Back to Holmes... “Plain meaning” approach – Good starting point – Followed Here? Why Not?

First to Invent: An Absolute Patent Law Principle? Completely secret descriptions Abandoned applications Foreign “known or used” references

The “Publication” Analogy Shows strength of “first inventor” policy – Worldwide, absolute “Subject to exceptions,” this is the top policy consideration

“The delays of the patent office ought not to cut down the effect of what has been done.” – p. 423

“Clifford had done all he could do to make” description public “Mailbox rule” for disclosure purposes?

Codified in Section 102(e): No patent if – (e) Invention was DESCRIBED [but NOT claimed] in... (2) a patent granted on an application for patent by another filed in the US before the [date of] invention

102(e) Issues Patent must be granted; then application is prior art as of FILING DATE: Nunc pro tunc – Provisional rejections Application must be “by another” – technical definition, inventive entities Amendments: “filed in the US” -- international priority filings; published US applications

Inventive entities The prior application of A can be cited against the later application of A + B under 35 USC 102(e) Different “inventive entities” create prior art against each other

MPEP (k) Provisional Rejection … Under 35 U.S.C. 102(e) … Where two applications of different inventive entities are copending, not published under 35 U.S.C. 122(b), and the filing dates differ, a provisional rejection under 35 U.S.C. 102(e) … should be made in the later filed application...

MPEP (f) Rejection Under 35 U.S.C. 102(e) [R-3] Examination of Applications 35 U.S.C. 102(e) is mostly utilized when the publication or issue date is too recent for the reference to be applied under 35 U.S.C. 102(a) or (b). In order to apply a reference under 35 U.S.C. 102(e), the inventive entity of the application must be different than that of the reference.

MPEP (f) (cont’d) Note that, where there are joint inventors, only one inventor [need be] be different for the inventive entities to be different and a rejection under 35 U.S.C. 102(e) is applicable even if there are some inventors in common between the application and the reference.

Combine applications – eliminate the reference File affadavit that claimed invention was derived from 102(e) prior art application Overcoming 102(e) rejection

(C) Filing an affidavit or declaration under 37 CFR showing that any unclaimed invention disclosed in the copending application was derived from the inventor of the other application and is thus not invention "by another“....

102(e) amendments PCT Filings: 102(e)(2) “treaty filings” Published patent applications – section 122(b) – Changed 1999 – “Backdate” publication to filing date

Fine Points Provisional rejections – Common inventors or assignee Foreign priority filings – Different treatment; only US Filings and their precise equivalents under PCT trigger section 102(e) – In re Hilmer (35 USC 119) Provisional applications – 35 USC 111 – Assumed to trigger 102(e)

Agenda Finish 102(a) – Klopfenstein, Hafner Section 102(e) – Inventive entities Section 102(f)

102(f): “The (f) is for Fraud”

35 USC § 102(f) “A person shall be entitled to a patent unless – * * * (f) He did not himself invent the subject matter sought to be patented

Two Main 102(f) Scenarios “Derivation” (invention theft) a la Campbell – Requirements: (1) Conception by Person A; (2) communication (enabling) to person B Inventorship rejections and disputes – PTO and litigation Related to 35 USC § 256 – Misjoinder (adding non-inventor to patent) – Non-joinder (omitting inventor from patent)

Typical derivation scenario ROBINSON LABS, INC., Plaintiff, v. WALLS INDUSTRIES, INC., Defendant. Sept. 30, WL (D.Minn.)

Robinson Labs 1. A multi-dimensional camouflaged garment, the garment serving to camouflage a wearer thereof by presenting an external appearance to an observer that tends to be indistinguishable from the environmental feature against which the wearer is observed, comprising: a garment external surface, being viewable by an observer and having a first portion and a second potion; the first portion of the garment external surface being formed of a substantially three dimensional material; and the second portion of the garment external surface being formed of a substantially two dimensional material.

the first portion of the garment external surface being formed of a substantially three dimensional material; and the second portion of the garment external surface being formed of a substantially two dimensional material. US Pat 5,695,835

Robinson Here, the crux of this analysis is whether the bow hunters first conceived of the invention claimed by the '835 Patent. The bow hunters put forth the idea of cutting off the leaves so as to remove the safety hazard. This was a specific settled idea addressing a solution to the problem at hand. Anyone with a pair of shears could reduce the invention to practice. The Court concludes that there is no material question of fact as to whether the bow hunters had conceived of an invention.

Transocean Offshore Deepwater Drilling, Inc. v. GlobalSantaFe Corp. --- F.Supp.2d ----, 2006 WL , at 21 Genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether facsimile, which included drawings of alleged infringer's offshore exploration and/or development drilling apparatus and which was sent to inventor of patented rig, was prior art for the purposes of showing derivation, precluding summary judgment in favor of patentee on alleged infringer's derivation defense. 35 U.S.C.A. § 102(f).

102(f) and “nonjoinder” "If nonjoinder of an actual inventor is proved by clear and convincing evidence, a patent is rendered invalid." Pannu v. Iolab Corp., 155 F.3d 1344, 1349 (Fed.Cir.1998). -- at 1349.

However, "[i]f a patentee can demonstrate that inventorship can be corrected as provided by [35 U.S.C. § 256], a district court must order correction of the patent, thus saving it from being rendered invalid." Id. at 1350.