Source: https://www.patentdocs.org/2012/07/uspto-issues-final-rule-for-preissuance-submissions.html?cid=6a00d83451ca1469e2017616c6b555970c
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Patent Docs: USPTO Issues Final Rule for Preissuance Submissions
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USPTO Issues Final Rule for Preissuance Submissions
Last week, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office published its final rule to implement the preissuance submissions by third parties provision of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (77 Fed. Reg. 42150). The final rule concerning preissuance submissions is the first of many final rule notices that the Office is expected to publish in order to implement AIA provisions that, like the preissuance submissions provision, will take effect on September 16, 2012.
As we noted when the Office published its notice of proposed rulemaking on the preissuance submissions provision in January, § 8 of the AIA amended 35 U.S.C. 122 by adding 35 U.S.C. 122(e), which lists certain conditions that apply to a third-party preissuance submission to the Office in a patent application (see "USPTO Proposes Rules Changes for Implementing AIA Provisions -- Preissuance Submissions Provision"). In particular, AIA § 8 permits any third party to submit for the Office's consideration and inclusion in an application's file "any patent, published patent application, or other printed publication of potential relevance to the examination of the application," provided that the submission is made:
before the earlier of --
(B) the later of --
The submission must also "set forth a concise description of the asserted relevance of each submitted document." This provision of the AIA, which takes effect on September 16, 2012, applies to any patent application filed before, on, or after that effective date.
The final rule specifies the requirements for a preissuance submission, which must be timely filed (as described above), be in writing, and contain:
(1) a list identifying the items being submitted;
(2) a concise description of the relevance of each item listed;
(3) a legible copy of each non-U.S. patent document listed;
(4) an English language translation of any non-English language item listed;
(5) a statement by the party making the submission that the submission complies with the statute and the rule; and
(6) the required fee.
The final rule notes that the statutory time period for making a third-party submission will not be tolled by an initial non-compliant submission. In addition, the Office will not set a time period for a third party to file a corrected third-party submission or accept amendments to a non-compliant submission that was previously filed. Moreover, the Office will not refund the required fee in the event that a third-party submission is determined to be noncompliant. With respect to the required fee, the final rule notes that the fee set forth in 37 C.F.R. § 1.17(p), which is currently $180, will apply to third-party submissions containing up to ten documents. For every ten additional documents, submitters will have to pay an additional fee under § 1.17(p). The Office will provide an exemption from the fee requirement for third-party submissions listing three or fewer documents, when the submission is the first third-party submission by a third party (or a party in privity with the third party) in a given application.
The final rule also cautions that third parties must use the dedicated Web-based interface for preissuance submissions when electronically filing such submissions. This can be done by selecting the "Third-Party Preissuance Submission under 37 CFR 1.290" option on the EFS-Web.
With respect to the impact of preissuance submissions on applicants (other than the consideration of relevant art during prosecution of a given application), the final rule notes that third-party submissions will not create a requirement on the part of the applicant to independently file submitted documents with the Office in an Information Disclosure Statement.
In addition to setting forth rules for implementing the preissuance submission provision of the AIA, the final rule also eliminates 37 C.F.R. § 1.99 ("Third-party submission in published application"), which permitted a third party to submit patents or publications relevant to a pending published application and have such submissions entered in the application file, but did not permit the third party to submit an accompanying concise description of the relevance of each submitted document, and limited the time period for such submissions to two months after the date of the patent application publication or the mailing of a notice of allowance, whichever was earlier. The final rule also eliminates 37 C.F.R. § 1.292, which provided for public use proceedings. The Office noted in the final rule notice that such proceedings were no longer necessary in view of post-grant review proceedings, provided by § 6 of the AIA, in which prior public use may be raised.
The Office made several changes to the proposed rules on preissuance submissions in response to comments received following publication of the Office's notice of proposed rulemaking. Among the changes are the following:
• The Office had proposed allowing third-party submissions in reissue applications, but in view of public comments it received decided not to adopt its previously proposed position. The final rule notice explains that because a reissue application is a post-issuance proceeding, a preissuance submission should not be permitted in a reissue application. The Office recommended that third parties seeking to submit information in a reissue application should use the protest provisions of 37 C.F.R. § 1.291 instead.
• The Office had also proposed amendments to § 1.291 to make the requirements for submitting protests clearer and more consistent with the requirements for submitting preissuance submissions under new § 1.290, but in view of comments it received decided to limit its efforts to harmonize § 1.290 and § 1.291. The final rule notice explains that the Office's proposed attempt to harmonize these sections may have resulted in some confusion.
• As a result of numerous comments it received regarding third party notification, the Office has decided that it will notify a third party of a non-compliant submission and inform the submitter of the reasons for non-compliance, provided that the third party provides an e-mail address with its submission (whether filed electronically or on paper).
• As a result of numerous comments it received regarding applicant notification, the Office has also decided that it will notify applicants upon entry of a compliant third-party submission, provided that the applicant participates in the e-Office Action program.
Posted at 11:41 PM in Patent Office Rules & Procedures | Permalink
I can see where it does not make any sense to require an applicant to file an IDS for any SUCCESSFUL third party submission as the information would of necessity already be with the Office in the official record.
But what if an attempt is UNsusccessful? Is the duty to disclose now triggered given that the Office has decided to inform the applicant of an UNsuccessful attempt at submitting art?
Let's say a third party submission is on point concerning a critical aspect of non-patentablity, but is rejected as not beign consice enough. The third party submission is made just within the time limts, so the rejection prevents the third party from re-submitting. The Office notifies the applicant of the submission. Is the duty of the applicant invoked? What if the applicant has a no-look-at-anything-not-officially-in-the-record policy (similar to many policies rejecting uninvited invention suggestions)? This would not be an unreasonable policy to have. What then? WIll the Office policy of notification serve as a de facto "awareness" that invokes the need to file an IDS?
Posted by: Skeptical | July 26, 2012 at 07:05 AM
I would expect that if the Office notifies the applicant of the submission that effectively, duty has been invoked. If the Office just stuck the papers in the file and didn't notify the applicant, it might be different, but I don't see how applicant could maintain they didn't know about it if they actually receive a notice. Hopefully this won't become a mechanism for anti-patent activists or creative competitors to harass applicants.
Posted by: Bogosity | July 26, 2012 at 07:54 AM
Skeptical: The Office will only notify the applicant about compliant third party submissions, so that's not a scenario you have to worry about. It seems to me that evaluation for compliance is a formalities issue, and doesn't need to be done by the examiner, so that the examiner may likewise remain unaware of the reference.
I've long thought, however, that you could simply mail the reference to the applicant and/or or his or her attorney, thereby triggering the duty to disclose, while avoiding the fees and deadlines.
Posted by: James Demers | July 26, 2012 at 08:06 AM
I guess my question runs to the concept of "notice," and what an applicant is required to do with a communication that is not officially a part of prosecution.
Just because the Office is the one sending the notice does not make that notice an official action precisly because that notice is not a part of the official record.
A colorable argument can be made that unsolicited mail, as a policy, is not reviewed. I provided a similar example in the way of unsolicited invention ideas. Corporations protect themselves from small (and not necessarily unscrupulous) entities by having just such a "we don't look" policy. No one makes the argument (at least successfully) that the large corporation has "notice" because the mailer of the unsolicited item can prove that the item was sent.
The "harassment" angle is a different and separate argument.
Posted by: Skeptical | July 26, 2012 at 09:14 AM
Thanks James, I think you are correct in that I misread the article.
However, my thoughts would still apply to your "simply mail the reference to the applicant" idea.
Posted by: Skeptical | July 26, 2012 at 11:18 AM
Perhaps consider this scenario. You have an attorney (perhaps one that has not filed a PCT or other application for you) mail the references to the inventor and the inventor/assignees' counsel, with a letter explaining that at least one reference is believed to be material to patentability of at least one claim of application X. How does that not provide you with evidence that can be used in an inequitable conduct defense, at least with regard to the intent prong?
Posted by: Moondog | July 27, 2012 at 06:58 AM
Your example also falls to my hypothetical.
Just as corporations have policies against accepting/opening/having-notice of independent inventors idea submissions to protect themselves from people later claiming that the corporations "stole" their idea, ANY unsolicited information from third parties can be similarly screened. There is NO intent if the information is screened in such a blanket matter.
Posted by: Skeptical | July 27, 2012 at 08:49 AM
Ah, yes. That's why I said to send it to the inventors. At their home address.
Posted by: Moondog | July 27, 2012 at 10:14 AM
Inventors take note.
Moondog: for shame. I certainly hope that you are not an actual attorney.
Avoid this unethical trap (it is unethical if you know someone has representation and you deal directly with the inventor bypassing that legal representative) by not opening and returning to sender with a note that any correspondence must be delivered to your legal representative any such documentation received at your personal address. Also consider asking your counsel to consider filing an ethics grievance with the USPTO Office of Enrollment and Discipline.
Posted by: Skeptical | July 27, 2012 at 10:43 AM
I would also point out that you did not say "send it to the inventors," but rather you said "send it to the inventors' counsel."
If you want to engage in trolling and moving of goalposts, please go to Patently-O.
Posted by: Skeptical | July 27, 2012 at 10:45 AM
Moondog, my apologies for missing the "inventor and" in your post.
Mea Culpa (but still watch for ethical violations, you are not at liberty to bypass counsel, especially if your intention is to "trick" someone).
Posted by: Skeptical | July 27, 2012 at 02:10 PM