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International Intellectual Property Prof. Manheim Spring, 2007 Patent Utility & Novelty Copyright © 2007
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Spring, 2007IIP2 Patentability Patentability Element US Law 35 USC TRIPsEPC Subject Matter § 101Art. 27Art. 52Art. 52, 5353 Utility § 101“Art. 57 Novelty § 102(a)“Art. 54 Statutory Bar § 102(b)“Art. 55 Non-Obvious ness § 103“Art. 56
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Spring, 2007IIP3 Utility US Const. Art. I, §8, par. 8 “to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts” Originalist reading: arts meant technology/industry 35 USC §101 (“new and useful process,” etc) “well established utility” required TRIPs Art. 27 (EPC Art. 52) “capable (susceptible) of industrial application” EPC Art. 57 An invention shall be considered as susceptible of industrial application if it can be made or used in any kind of industry, including agriculture
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Spring, 2007IIP4 Utility under US Law “Well-established” Utility [MPEP 2107] 1. if a person of ordinary skill in the art would immedi- ately appreciate why the invention is useful, and 2. the utility is specific, substantial, and credible Specific Utility (operability) Does invention work as specified? Substantial Utility Particular practical purpose excludes ‘‘throw-away" inventions Process patents must produce useful products perpetual motion machine unpatentable - doesn’t work
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Spring, 2007IIP5 Utility under US Law Credible Utility from perspective of one of ordinary skill in the art in view of disclosure & other evidence of record Social Utility (beneficial value)? US patent law generally amoral But some devices (e.g., gambling) have been rejected under this standard Remember: A patent does not give the patentee the right to practice the invention She must still comply with all regulatory requirements A patent merely excludes others
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Spring, 2007IIP6 Utility under US Law Utility must be affirmatively disclosed A specific application must appear Particularly important w/ process patents broad patent scope (claiming unspecified products) is tantamount to patenting an idea creates unknown range of applications claims limited to demonstrated utility no speculative or anticipated claims “A patent is not a hunting license” Abe Fortas If utility not disclosed, also fails § 112 (must “teach how to use the invention” )
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Spring, 2007IIP7 Utility vs. Industrial Application Inventions of personal application only Ex: a method of contraception... to be applied in the private and personal sphere of a human being" Rejected in T 0074/93T 0074/93 Draft Substantive Patent Law Treaty (2004) Draft Substantive Patent Law Treaty Art. 12(4) A claimed invention shall be.. considered industrially applicable (useful) if it A. can be made or used for exploitation in any field of [commercial][economic] activity B. … in any kind of industry [in broadest sense] C. has a specific, substantial, & credible utility Alternatives from SCP 2004
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Spring, 2007IIP8 Examples of Really Useful Devices Method of Exercising a Cat Santa Claus Detector Santa Claus Detector Toe Puppet Toe Puppet Motorized Ice Cream Cone Motorized Ice Cream Cone
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Spring, 2007IIP9 Problem 3-13 US and EU Patent apps for low starch rice Claims based on refined (unpublished) TK from Sri Lanka Does patent application satisfy novelty in US? in EU?
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Spring, 2007IIP10 Novelty in US 35 USC § 102: A person shall be entitled to a patent unless: 35 USC § 102 a) the invention was known or used by others in this country, or patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country, before the invention thereof by the applicant for patent TK from other countries not a bar to US patentability unless published Student notes would suffice if “published”
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Spring, 2007IIP11 Novelty - US 102(a) Anticipation [Prior to Invention] The invention is substantially known before its invention by inventor Enough of the invention has already been disclosed to enable one skilled in the art to practice it “That which infringes, if later, anticipates, if earlier” Even independent invention by inventor does not add to the public knowledge base 102(b) Statutory Bar [Prior to Application] Bars to patent despite novelty of invention Inventor has 12 months after public disclosure
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Spring, 2007IIP12 Anticipation Prior Art Documentary evidence of prior knowledge by others (Domestic or Foreign) Prior patent Publication (“reference” must be enabling) Nondocumentary evidence of prior knowledge by others (Domestic only) Prior application (eventually published or granted) Public knowledge Use Invention by another unless suppressed, abandoned, concealed Invention Priority
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Spring, 2007IIP13 Statutory Bar Events > 12 months prior to application Policy: promote diligence & speedy disclosure Applies both to acts of inventor and others Domestic & Foreign Bars Prior patent Publication Domestic Bars Public Use On Sale Efforts to commercialize don’t have to succeed Or foreign application, if granted before domestic application filed Application Priority These events indicate abandonment
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Spring, 2007IIP14 Other Loss of Rights - US 102(c) abandonment 102(d) first patented outside US on foreign application filed > 12mo. before US app. 102(e) described in another’s application filed before invention by applicant, and (1) other app published per § 122(b) [PCT], or (2) other app eventually granted Int app only if published in English & US designated 102(f) applicant is not the inventor
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Spring, 2007IIP15 Other Loss of Rights - US 102(g) first invented by another, and not abandoned, suppressed, or concealed - (1) proved during interference proceeding, or (2) “invented” by earlier conception (despite later reduction to practice), coupled with reasonable diligence from a time prior to conception by applicant
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Spring, 2007IIP16 Novelty - EU EPC 54 EPC 54 (1) “An invention shall be considered to be new if it does not form part of the state of the art” (2) “The state of the art shall be held to comprise everything made available to the public by means of a written or oral description, by use, or in any other way, before the date of filing of the European patent application.” Foreign TK can operate as bar under EPC Use of low starch rice by Sri Lankan tribes and oral lecture by Prof. Varuni are both prior art
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Spring, 2007IIP17 Neem Tree (EPO 2001) Facts: WP Grace obtains patent from EPO for fungi- cide based on the Indian Neem Tree Priority Date = 1989 IN Field trials ‘85 & ‘89 “Use” of Neem oil extract Patent uses different formulation of Neem oil IN trials = “prior art” “available to the public” Claims are not novel
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Spring, 2007IIP18 Novelty Grace’s Neem Oil “invention” Not novel in Europe (not patentable) Novel in US (patentable) Does this distinction make any logical sense? Why don’t foreign uses constitute prior art in US? To promote “importation” of foreign inventions, or parochialism, or too burdensome for inventors? TRIPs Art 27(1) “invention” must be “new” TRIPs Art 27(1) Ambiguous on geographical limitations
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Spring, 2007IIP19 Patent Applications as Prior Art If Patent 2 filed @ T6, Patent 1 is Prior Art no matter where P1 was filed/issued 35 USC 102(a) EPC 54(3) If Patent 2 filed @ T4, Patent 1 is Prior Art no matter where P1 was filed 35 USC 102(e) - if foreign filing must eventually issue If Patent 2 filed @ T2, Patent 1 is Prior Art only if filed in US (on T1 date) and later published 35 USC 102(e) Patent 1 filed T1 Patent 2 filed T2 Patent 1 issued T3 T5 Patent 1 published Patent 2 filed T4 Patent 2 filed T6
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Spring, 2007IIP20 Problem 3-14 Timeline 30 Nov 04 - G files patent app in DE (patent 1) 1 Feb 05 - L files patent app in X (patent 2) 1 Dec 05 - G files patent app in X (patent 1) Paris priority date of 30 Nov 04 L’s patent 2 app does not defeat G’s patent 1 app “defensive use” of priority dates Validity of L’s patent 2 Is patent 1 application in DE prior art in X? “offensive use” of priority dates Yes EU; No US (no priority date for offensive use) §102(e)
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