[Title 37 CFR ]
[Code of Federal Regulations (annual edition) - July 1, 2002 Edition]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office]
[[Page i]]
37
Revised as of July 1, 2002
Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights
Containing a codification of documents of general
applicability and future effect
As of July 1, 2002
With Ancillaries
Published by
Office of the Federal Register
National Archives and Records
Administration
A Special Edition of the Federal Register
[[Page ii]]
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON : 2002
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing
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[[Page iii]]
Table of Contents
Page
Explanation................................................. v
Title 37:
Chapter I--United States Patent and Trademark
Office, Department of Commerce 3
Chapter II--Copyright Office, Library of Congress 405
Chapter IV--Assistant Secretary for Technology
Policy, Department of Commerce 599
Chapter V--Under Secretary for Technology,
Department of Commerce 623
Finding Aids:
Material Approved for Incorporation by Reference........ 631
Table of CFR Titles and Chapters........................ 633
Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR...... 651
List of CFR Sections Affected........................... 661
[[Page iv]]
----------------------------
Cite this Code: CFR
To cite the regulations in
this volume use title,
part and section number.
Thus, 37 CFR 1.1 refers to
title 37, part 1, section
1.
----------------------------
[[Page v]]
EXPLANATION
The Code of Federal Regulations is a codification of the general and
permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the Executive
departments and agencies of the Federal Government. The Code is divided
into 50 titles which represent broad areas subject to Federal
regulation. Each title is divided into chapters which usually bear the
name of the issuing agency. Each chapter is further subdivided into
parts covering specific regulatory areas.
Each volume of the Code is revised at least once each calendar year
and issued on a quarterly basis approximately as follows:
Title 1 through Title 16.................................as of January 1
Title 17 through Title 27..................................as of April 1
Title 28 through Title 41...................................as of July 1
Title 42 through Title 50................................as of October 1
The appropriate revision date is printed on the cover of each
volume.
LEGAL STATUS
The contents of the Federal Register are required to be judicially
noticed (44 U.S.C. 1507). The Code of Federal Regulations is prima facie
evidence of the text of the original documents (44 U.S.C. 1510).
HOW TO USE THE CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS
The Code of Federal Regulations is kept up to date by the individual
issues of the Federal Register. These two publications must be used
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To determine whether a Code volume has been amended since its
revision date (in this case, July 1, 2002), consult the ``List of CFR
Sections Affected (LSA),'' which is issued monthly, and the ``Cumulative
List of Parts Affected,'' which appears in the Reader Aids section of
the daily Federal Register. These two lists will identify the Federal
Register page number of the latest amendment of any given rule.
EFFECTIVE AND EXPIRATION DATES
Each volume of the Code contains amendments published in the Federal
Register since the last revision of that volume of the Code. Source
citations for the regulations are referred to by volume number and page
number of the Federal Register and date of publication. Publication
dates and effective dates are usually not the same and care must be
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instances where the effective date is beyond the cut-off date for the
Code a note has been inserted to reflect the future effective date. In
those instances where a regulation published in the Federal Register
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inserted following the text.
OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-511) requires
Federal agencies to display an OMB control number with their information
collection request.
[[Page vi]]
Many agencies have begun publishing numerous OMB control numbers as
amendments to existing regulations in the CFR. These OMB numbers are
placed as close as possible to the applicable recordkeeping or reporting
requirements.
OBSOLETE PROVISIONS
Provisions that become obsolete before the revision date stated on
the cover of each volume are not carried. Code users may find the text
of provisions in effect on a given date in the past by using the
appropriate numerical list of sections affected. For the period before
January 1, 1986, consult either the List of CFR Sections Affected, 1949-
1963, 1964-1972, or 1973-1985, published in seven separate volumes. For
the period beginning January 1, 1986, a ``List of CFR Sections
Affected'' is published at the end of each CFR volume.
INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE
What is incorporation by reference? Incorporation by reference was
established by statute and allows Federal agencies to meet the
requirement to publish regulations in the Federal Register by referring
to materials already published elsewhere. For an incorporation to be
valid, the Director of the Federal Register must approve it. The legal
effect of incorporation by reference is that the material is treated as
if it were published in full in the Federal Register (5 U.S.C. 552(a)).
This material, like any other properly issued regulation, has the force
of law.
What is a proper incorporation by reference? The Director of the
Federal Register will approve an incorporation by reference only when
the requirements of 1 CFR part 51 are met. Some of the elements on which
approval is based are:
(a) The incorporation will substantially reduce the volume of
material published in the Federal Register.
(b) The matter incorporated is in fact available to the extent
necessary to afford fairness and uniformity in the administrative
process.
(c) The incorporating document is drafted and submitted for
publication in accordance with 1 CFR part 51.
Properly approved incorporations by reference in this volume are
listed in the Finding Aids at the end of this volume.
What if the material incorporated by reference cannot be found? If
you have any problem locating or obtaining a copy of material listed in
the Finding Aids of this volume as an approved incorporation by
reference, please contact the agency that issued the regulation
containing that incorporation. If, after contacting the agency, you find
the material is not available, please notify the Director of the Federal
Register, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington DC
20408, or call (202) 523-4534.
CFR INDEXES AND TABULAR GUIDES
A subject index to the Code of Federal Regulations is contained in a
separate volume, revised annually as of January 1, entitled CFR Index
and Finding Aids. This volume contains the Parallel Table of Statutory
Authorities and Agency Rules (Table I). A list of CFR titles, chapters,
and parts and an alphabetical list of agencies publishing in the CFR are
also included in this volume.
An index to the text of ``Title 3--The President'' is carried within
that volume.
The Federal Register Index is issued monthly in cumulative form.
This index is based on a consolidation of the ``Contents'' entries in
the daily Federal Register.
A List of CFR Sections Affected (LSA) is published monthly, keyed to
the revision dates of the 50 CFR titles.
[[Page vii]]
REPUBLICATION OF MATERIAL
There are no restrictions on the republication of material appearing
in the Code of Federal Regulations.
INQUIRIES
For a legal interpretation or explanation of any regulation in this
volume, contact the issuing agency. The issuing agency's name appears at
the top of odd-numbered pages.
For inquiries concerning CFR reference assistance, call 202-523-5227
or write to the Director, Office of the Federal Register, National
Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC 20408 or e-mail
[email protected].
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site also contains links to GPO Access.
Raymond A. Mosley,
Director,
Office of the Federal Register.
July 1, 2002.
[[Page ix]]
THIS TITLE
Title 37--Patents, Trademarks and Copyrights is composed of one
volume. The contents of this volume represent all current regulations
codified under this title of the CFR as of July 1, 2002.
In this revision, the parts in chapter I, subchapter A are regrouped
according to subject matter. All parts pertaining to patents--parts 1
and 5--appear sequentially. All parts pertaining to trademarks--parts 2
and 6--follow, also in sequence. Part 3 which pertains to both patents
and trademarks follows part 1. Appropriate notes are inserted in the
text to guide the user.
[[Page x]]
[[Page 1]]
TITLE 37--PATENTS, TRADEMARKS, AND COPYRIGHTS
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Part
chapter i--United States Patent and Trademark Office,
Department of Commerce.................................... 1
chapter ii--Copyright Office, Library of Congress........... 201
chapter iv--Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy,
Department of Commerce.................................... 401
chapter v--Under Secretary for Technology, Department of
Commerce.................................................. 501
[[Page 3]]
CHAPTER I--UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE,
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Editorial Note: Chapter I--United States Patent and Trademark Office,
Department of Commerce, Subchapter A--General, contains patent and
trademark regulations. Subchapter A has been restructured to allow parts
pertaining to patent regulations and trademark regulations to be grouped
separately.
SUBCHAPTER A--GENERAL
PATENTS
Part Page
1 Rules of practice in patent cases........... 5
3 Assignment, recording and rights of assignee 223
4 Complaints regarding invention promoters.... 229
5 Secrecy of certain inventions and licenses
to export and file applications in
foreign countries....................... 230
7 [Reserved]
Index I--Rules relating to patents.......... 239
TRADEMARKS
2 Rules of practice in trademark cases........ 263
6 Classification of goods and services under
the Trademark Act....................... 321
7 [Reserved]
Index II--Rules relating to trademarks...... 325
PRACTICE BEFORE THE PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
10 Representation of others before the Patent
and Trademark Office.................... 337
15-15a [Reserved]
Index III--Rules relating to practice before
the Patent and Trademark Office......... 367
SUBCHAPTER B--ADMINISTRATION
100-101 [Reserved]
102 Disclosure of government information........ 373
[[Page 4]]
104 Legal process............................... 397
SUBCHAPTER C--PROTECTION OF FOREIGN MASK WORKS
150 Requests for Presidential proclamations
pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 902(a)(2)......... 402
[[Page 5]]
SUBCHAPTER A--GENERAL
PATENTS--Table of Contents
PART 1--RULES OF PRACTICE IN PATENT CASES--Table of Contents
Subpart A--General Provisions
General Information and Correspondence
Sec.
1.1 Addresses for correspondence with the Patent and Trademark Office.
1.2 Business to be transacted in writing.
1.3 Business to be conducted with decorum and courtesy.
1.4 Nature of correspondence and signature requirements.
1.5 Identification of application, patent or registration.
1.6 Receipt of correspondence.
1.7 Times for taking action; Expiration on Saturday, Sunday or Federal
holiday.
1.8 Certificate of mailing or transmission.
1.9 Definitions.
1.10 Filing of correspondence by ``Express Mail.''
Records and Files of the Patent and Trademark Office
1.11 Files open to the public.
1.12 Assignment records open to public inspection.
1.13 Copies and certified copies.
1.14 Patent applications preserved in confidence.
1.15 Requests for identifiable records.
Fees and Payment of Money
1.16 National application filing fees.
1.17 Patent application and reexamination processing fees.
1.18 Patent post allowance (including issue) fees.
1.19 Document supply fees.
1.20 Post issuance fees.
1.21 Miscellaneous fees and charges.
1.22 Fees payable in advance.
1.23 Methods of payment.
1.24 [Reserved]
1.25 Deposit accounts.
1.26 Refunds.
1.27 Definition of small entities and establishing status as a small
entity to permit payment of small entity fees; when a
determination of entitlement to small entity status and
notification of loss of entitlement to small entity status are
required; fraud on the Office.
1.28 Refunds when small entity status is later established; how errors
in small entity status are excused.
Subpart B--National Processing Provisions
Prosecution of Application and Appointment of Attorney or Agent
1.31 Applicants may be represented by a registered attorney or agent.
1.32 [Reserved]
1.33 Correspondence respecting patent applications, reexamination
proceedings, and other proceedings.
1.34 Recognition for representation.
1.36 Revocation of power of attorney or authorization; withdrawal of
registered attorney or agent.
Who May Apply for a Patent
1.41 Applicant for patent.
1.42 When the inventor is dead.
1.43 When the inventor is insane or legally incapacitated.
1.44 [Reserved]
1.45 Joint inventors.
1.46 Assigned inventions and patents.
1.47 Filing when an inventor refuses to sign or cannot be reached.
1.48 Correction of inventorship in a patent application, other than a
reissue application, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 116.
The Application
1.51 General requisites of an application.
1.52 Language, paper, writing, margins.
1.53 Application number, filing date, and completion of application.
1.54 Parts of application to be filed together; filing receipt.
1.55 Claim for foreign priority.
1.56 Duty to disclose information material to patentability.
1.57 [Reserved]
1.58 Chemical and mathematical formulae and tables.
1.59 Expungement of information or copy of papers in application file.
1.60-162 [Reserved]
Oath or Declaration
1.63 Oath or declaration.
1.64 Person making oath or declaration.
1.66 Officers authorized to administer oaths.
1.67 Supplemental oath or declaration.
1.68 Declaration in lieu of oath.
1.69 Foreign language oaths and declarations.
1.70 [Reserved]
Specification
1.71 Detailed description and specification of the invention.
1.72 Title and abstract.
1.73 Summary of the invention.
1.74 Reference to drawings.
[[Page 6]]
1.75 Claim(s).
1.76 Application data sheet.
1.77 Arrangement of application elements.
1.78 Claiming benefit of earlier filing date and cross-references to
other applications.
1.79 Reservation clauses not permitted.
The Drawings
1.81 Drawings required in patent application.
1.83 Content of drawing.
1.84 Standards for drawings.
1.85 Corrections to drawings.
1.88 [Reserved]
Models, Exhibits, Specimens
1.91 Models or exhibits not generally admitted as part of application
or patent.
1.92 [Reserved]
1.93 Specimens.
1.94 Return of models, exhibits or specimens.
1.95 Copies of exhibits.
1.96 Submission of computer program listings.
Information Disclosure Statement
1.97 Filing information disclosure statement.
1.98 Content of information disclosure statement.
1.99 Third-party submission in published application.
Examination of Applications
1.101 [Reserved]
1.102 Advancement of examination.
1.103 Suspension of action by the Office.
1.104 Nature of examination.
1.105 Requirements for information.
1.106-1.109 [Reserved]
1.110 Inventorship and date of invention of the subject matter of
individual claims.
Action by Applicant and Further Consideration
1.111 Reply by applicant or patent owner to a non-final Office action.
1.112 Reconsideration before final action.
1.113 Final rejection or action.
1.114 Request for continued examination.
Amendments
1.115 Preliminary amendments.
1.116 Amendments after final action or appeal.
1.117-1.119 [Reserved]
1.121 Manner of making amendments in applications.
1.122-1.124 [Reserved]
1.125 Substitute specification.
1.126 Numbering of claims.
1.127 Petition from refusal to admit amendment.
Transitional Provisions
1.129 Transitional procedures for limited examination after final
rejection and restriction practice.
Affidavits Overcoming Rejections
1.130 Affidavit or declaration to disqualify commonly owned patent or
published application as prior art.
1.131 Affidavit or declaration of prior invention.
1.132 Affidavits or declarations traversing rejections or objections.
Interviews
1.133 Interviews.
Time for Reply by Applicant; Abandonment of Application
1.134 Time period for reply to an Office action.
1.135 Abandonment for failure to reply within time period.
1.136 Extensions of time.
1.137 Revival of abandoned application, terminated reexamination
proceeding, or lapsed patent.
1.138 Express abandonment.
1.139 [Reserved]
Joinder of Inventions in One Application; Restriction
1.141 Different inventions in one national application.
1.142 Requirement for restriction.
1.143 Reconsideration of requirement.
1.144 Petition from requirement for restriction.
1.145 Subsequent presentation of claims for different invention.
1.146 Election of species.
Design Patents
1.151 Rules applicable.
1.152 Design drawings.
1.153 Title, description and claim, oath or declaration.
1.154 Arrangement of application elements in a design application.
1.155 Expedited examination of design applications.
Plant Patents
1.161 Rules applicable.
1.162 Applicant, oath or declaration.
1.163 Specification and arrangement of application elements in a plant
application.
1.164 Claim.
1.165 Plant drawings.
1.166 Specimens.
1.167 Examination.
Reissues
1.171 Application for reissue.
1.172 Applicants, assignees.
[[Page 7]]
1.173 Reissue specification, drawings, and amendments.
1.174 [Reserved]
1.175 Reissue oath or declaration.
1.176 Examination of reissue.
1.177 Issuance of multiple reissue patents.
1.178 Original patent; continuing duty of applicant.
1.179 Notice of reissue application.
Petitions and Action by the Commissioner
1.181 Petition to the Commissioner.
1.182 Questions not specifically provided for.
1.183 Suspension of rules.
1.184 [Reserved]
Appeal to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences
1.191 Appeal to Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
1.192 Appellant's brief.
1.193 Examiner's answer and reply brief.
1.194 Oral hearing.
1.195 Affidavits or declarations after appeal.
1.196 Decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
1.197 Action following decision.
1.198 Reopening after decision.
Publication of Applications.
1.211 Publication of applications.
1.213 Nonpublication request.
1.215 Patent application publication.
1.217 Publication of a redacted copy of an application.
1.219 Early publication.
1.221 Voluntary publication or republication of patent application
publication.
Miscellaneous Provisions
1.248 Service of papers; manner of service; proof of service in cases
other than interferences.
1.251 Unlocatable file.
Protests and Public Use Proceedings
1.291 Protests by the public against pending applications.
1.292 Public use proceedings.
1.293 Statutory invention registration.
1.294 Examination of request for publication of a statutory invention
registration and patent application to which the request is
directed.
1.295 Review of decision finally refusing to publish a statutory
invention registration.
1.296 Withdrawal of request for publication of statutory invention
registration.
1.297 Publication of statutory invention registration.
Review of Patent and Trademark Office Decisions by Court
1.301 Appeal to U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
1.302 Notice of appeal.
1.303 Civil action under 35 U.S.C. 145, 146, 306.
1.304 Time for appeal or civil action.
Allowance and Issue of Patent
1.311 Notice of allowance.
1.312 Amendments after allowance.
1.313 Withdrawal from issue.
1.314 Issuance of patent.
1.315 Delivery of patent.
1.316 Application abandoned for failure to pay issue fee.
1.317 Lapsed patents; delayed payment of balance of issue fee.
1.318 [Reserved]
Disclaimer
1.321 Statutory disclaimers, including terminal disclaimers.
Correction of Errors in Patent
1.322 Certificate of correction of Office mistake.
1.323 Certificate of correction of applicant's mistake.
1.324 Correction of inventorship in patent, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 256.
1.325 Other mistakes not corrected.
Arbitration Awards
1.331-1.334 [Reserved]
1.335 Filing of notice of arbitration awards.
Amendment of Rules
1.351 Amendments to rules will be published.
1.352 [Reserved]
Maintenance Fees
1.362 Time for payment of maintenance fees.
1.363 Fee address for maintenance fee purposes.
1.366 Submission of maintenance fees.
1.377 Review of decision refusing to accept and record payment of a
maintenence fee filed prior to expiration of patent.
1.378 Acceptance of delayed payment of maintenance fee in expired
patent to reinstate patent.
Subpart C--International Processing Provisions
General Information
1.401 Definitions of terms under the Patent Cooperation Treaty.
1.412 The United States Receiving Office.
1.413 The United States International Searching Authority.
[[Page 8]]
1.414 The United States Patent and Trademark Ofice as a Designated
Office or Elected Office.
1.415 The International Bureau.
1.416 The United States International Preliminary Examining Authority.
1.417 Submission of translation of international application.
1.419 Display of currently valid control number under the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
Who May File an International Application
1.421 Applicant for international application.
1.422 When the inventor is dead.
1.423 When the inventor is insane or legally incapacitated.
1.424 Joint inventors.
1.425 Filing by other than inventor.
The International Application
1.431 International application requirements.
1.432 Designation of States and payment of designation and confirmation
fees.
1.433 Physical requirements of international application.
1.434 The request.
1.435 The description.
1.436 The claims.
1.437 The drawings.
1.438 The abstract.
Fees
1.445 International application filing, processing and search fees.
1.446 Refund of international application filing and processing fees.
Priority
1.451 The priority claim and priority document in an international
application.
Representation
1.455 Representation in international applications.
Transmittal of Record Copy
1.461 Procedures for transmittal of record copy to the International
Bureau.
Timing
1.465 Timing of application processing based on the priority date.
1.468 Delays in meeting time limits.
Amendments
1.471 Corrections and amendments during international processing.
1.472 Changes in person, name, or address of applicants and inventors.
Unity of Invention
1.475 Unity of invention before the International Searching Authority,
the International Preliminary Examining Authority and during
the national stage.
1.476 Determination of unity of invention before the International
Searching Authority.
1.477 Protest to lack of unity of invention before the International
Searching Authority.
International Preliminary Examination
1.480 Demand for international preliminary examination.
1.481 Payment of international preliminary examination fees.
1.482 International preliminary examination fees.
1.484 Conduct of international preliminary examination.
1.485 Amendments by applicant during international preliminary
examination.
1.488 Determination of unity of invention before the International
Preliminary Examining Authority.
1.489 Protest to lack of unity of invention before the International
Preliminary Examining Authority.
National Stage
1.491 National stage commencement and entry
1.492 National stage fees.
1.495 Entering the national stage in the United States of America as an
Elected Office.
1.496 Examination of international applications in the national stage.
1.497 Oath or declaration under 35 U.S.C. 371(c)(4).
1.499 Unity of invention during the national stage.
Subpart D--Ex Parte Reexamination of Patents
Citation of Prior Art
1.501 Citation of prior art in patent files.
1.502 Processing of prior art citations during an ex parte
reexamination proceeding.
Request for Ex Parte Reexamination
1.510 Request for ex parte reexamination.
1.515 Determination of the request for ex parte
1.520 Ex parte reexamination at the initiative of the Commissioner.
Ex Parte Reexamination
1.525 Order for ex parte reexamination.
1.530 Statement by patent owner in ex parte reexamination; amendment by
patent
[[Page 9]]
owner in ex parte or inter partes reexamination; inventorship
change in ex parte or inter partes reexamination.
1.535 Reply by third party requester in ex parte reexamination.
1.540 Consideration of responses in ex parte reexamination.
1.550 Conduct of ex parte reexamination proceedings.
1.552 Scope of reexamination in ex parte reexamination proceedings.
1.555 Information material to patentability in ex parte reexamination
and inter partes reexamination proceedings.
1.560 Interviews in ex parte reexamination proceedings.
1.565 Concurrent office proceedings which include an ex parte
reexamination proceeding.
Ex Parte Reexamination Certificate
1.570 Issuance of ex parte reexamination certificate after ex parte
reexamination proceedings.
Subpart E--Interferences
1.601 Scope of rules, definitions.
1.602 Interest in applications and patents involved in an interference.
1.603 Interference between applications; subject matter of the
interference.
1.604 Request for interference between applications by an applicant.
1.605 Suggestion of claim to applicant by examiner.
1.606 Interference between an application and a patent; subject matter
of the interference.
1.607 Request by applicant for interference with patent.
1.608 Interference between an application and a patent; prima facie
showing by applicant.
1.609 [Reserved]
1.610 Assignment of interference to administrative patent judge, time
period for completing interference.
1.611 Declaration of interference.
1.612 Access to applications.
1.613 Lead attorney, same attorney representing different parties in an
interference, withdrawal of attorney or agent.
1.614 Jurisdiction over interference.
1.615 Suspension of ex parte prosecution.
1.616 Sanctions for failure to comply with rules or order or for taking
and maintaining a frivolous position.
1.617 Summary judgment against applicant.
1.618 Return of unauthorized papers.
1.621 Preliminary statement, time for filing, notice of filing.
1.622 Preliminary statement, who made invention, where invention made.
1.623 Preliminary statement; invention made in United States, a NAFTA
country, or a WTO member country.
1.624 Preliminary statement; invention made in a place other than the
United States, a NAFTA country, or a WTO member country.
1.625 Preliminary statement; derivation by an opponent.
1.626 Preliminary statement; earlier application.
1.627 Preliminary statement; sealing before filing, opening of
statement.
1.628 Preliminary statement; correction of error.
1.629 Effect of preliminary statement.
1.630 Reliance on earlier application.
1.631 Access to preliminary statement, service of preliminary
statement.
1.632 Notice of intent to argue abandonment, suppression, or
concealment by opponent.
1.633 Preliminary motions.
1.634 Motion to correct inventorship.
1.635 Miscellaneous motions.
1.636 Motions, time for filing.
1.637 Content of motions.
1.638 Opposition and reply; time for filing opposition and reply.
1.639 Evidence in support of motion, opposition, or reply.
1.640 Motions, hearing and decision, redeclaration of interference,
order to show cause.
1.641 Unpatentability discovered by administrative patent judge.
1.642 Addition of application or patent to interference.
1.643 Prosecution of interference by assignee.
1.644 Petitions in interferences.
1.645 Extension of time, late papers, stay of proceedings.
1.646 Service of papers, proof of service.
1.647 Translation of document in foreign language.
1.651 Setting times for discovery and taking testimony, parties
entitled to take testimony.
1.652 Judgment for failure to take testimony or file record.
1.653 Record and exhibits.
1.654 Final hearing.
1.655 Matters considered in rendering a final decision.
1.656 Briefs for final hearing.
1.657 Burden of proof as to date of invention.
1.658 Final decision.
1.659 Recommendation.
1.660 Notice of reexamination, reissue, protest, or litigation.
1.661 Termination of interference after judgment.
1.662 Request for entry of adverse judgment; reissue filed by patentee.
1.663 Status of claim of defeated applicant after interference.
1.664 Action after interference.
1.665 Second interference.
[[Page 10]]
1.666 Filing of interference settlement agreements.
1.671 Evidence must comply with rules.
1.672 Manner of taking testimony.
1.673 Notice of examination of witness.
1.674 Persons before whom depositions may be taken.
1.675 Examination of witness, reading and signing transcript of
deposition.
1.676 Certification and filing by officer, marking exhibits.
1.677 Form of an affidavit or a transcript of deposition.
1.678 Time for filing transcript of deposition.
1.679 Inspection of transcript.
1.682-1.684 [Reserved]
1.685 Errors and irregularities in depositions.
1.687 Additional discovery.
1.688 [Reserved]
1.690 Arbitration of interferences.
Subpart F--Adjustment and Extension of Patent Term
Adjustment of Patent Term Due to Examination Delay
1.701 Extension of patent term due to examination delay under the
Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1999 (original applications,
other than designs, filed on or after June 8, 1995, and before
May 29, 2000).
1.702 Grounds for adjustment of patent term due to examination delay
under the Patent Term Guarantee Act of 1999 (original
applications, other than designs, filed on or after May 29,
2000).
1.703 Period of adjustment of patent term due to examination delay.
1.704 Reduction of period of adjustment of patent term.
1.705 Patent term adjustment determination.
Extension of Patent Term Due to Regulatory Review
1.710 Patents subject to extension of the patent term.
1.720 Conditions for extension of patent term.
1.730 Applicant for extension of patent term; signature requirements.
1.740 Formal requirements for application for extension of patent term;
correction of informalities.
1.741 Complete application given a filing date; petition procedure.
1.750 Determination of eligibility for extension of patent term.
1.760 Interim extension of patent term under 35 U.S.C. 156(e)(2).
1.765 Duty of disclosure in patent term extension proceedings.
1.770 Express withdrawal of application for extension of patent term.
1.775 Calculation of patent term extension for a human drug, antibiotic
drug or human biological product.
1.776 Calculation of patent term extension for a food additive or color
additive.
1.777 Calculation of patent term extension for a medical device.
1.778 Calculation of patent term extension for an animal drug product.
1.779 Calculation of patent term extension for a veterinary biological
product.
1.780 Certificate or order of extension of patent term.
1.785 Multiple applications for extension of term of the same patent or
of different patents for the same regulatory review period for
a product.
1.790 Interim extension of patent term under 35 U.S.C. 156(d)(5).
1.791 Termination of interim extension granted prior to regulatory
approval of a product for commercial marketing or use.
Subpart G--Biotechnology Invention Disclosures
Deposit of Biological Material
1.801 Biological material.
1.802 Need or Opportunity to make a deposit.
1.803 Acceptable depository.
1.804 Time of making an original deposit.
1.805 Replacement or supplement of deposit.
1.806 Term of deposit.
1.807 Viability of deposit.
1.808 Furnishing of samples.
1.809 Examination procedures.
Application Disclosures Containing Nucleotide and/or Amino Acid
Sequences
1.821 Nucleotide and/or amino acid sequence disclosures in patent
applications.
1.822 Symbols and format to be used for nucleotide and/or amino acid
sequence data.
1.823 Requirements for nucleotide and/or amino acid sequences as part
of the application.
1.824 Form and format for nucleotide and/or amino acid sequence
submissions in computer readable form.
1.825 Amendments to or replacement of sequence listing and computer
readable copy thereof.
[[Page 11]]
Appendix A to Subpart G--Sample Sequence Listing
Subpart H--Inter Partes Reexamination of Patents That Issued From an
Original Application Filed in the United States on or After November 29,
1999
Prior Art Citations
1.902 Processing of prior art citations during an inter partes
reexamination proceeding.
Requirements for Inter Partes Reexamination Proceedings
1.903 Service of papers on parties in inter partes reexamination.
1.904 Notice of inter partes reexamination in Official Gazette.
1.905 Submission of papers by the public in inter partes reexamination.
1.906 Scope of reexamination in inter partes reexamination proceeding.
1.907 Inter partes reexamination prohibited.
1.913 Persons eligible to file request for inter partes reexamination.
1.915 Content of request for inter partes reexamination.
1.919 Filing date of request for inter partes reexamination.
1.923 Examiner's determination on the request for inter partes
reexamination.
1.925 Partial refund if request for inter partes reexamination is not
ordered.
1.927 Petition to review refusal to order inter partes reexamination.
Inter Partes Reexamination of Patents
1.931 Order for inter partes reexamination.
Information Disclosure in Inter Partes Reexamination
1.933 Patent owner duty of disclosure in inter partes reexamination
proceedings.
Office Actions and Responses (Before the Examiner) in Inter Partes
Reexamination
1.935 Initial Office action usually accompanies order for inter partes
reexamination.
1.937 Conduct of inter partes reexamination.
1.939 Unauthorized papers in inter partes reexamination.
1.941 Amendments by patent owner in inter partes reexamination.
1.943 Requirements of responses, written comments, and briefs in inter
partes reexamination.
1.945 Response to Office action by patent owner in inter partes
reexamination.
1.947 Comments by third party requester to patent owner's response in
inter partes reexamination.
1.948 Limitations on submission of prior art by third party requester
following the order for inter partes reexamination.
1.949 Examiner's Office action closing prosecution in inter partes
reexamination.
1.951 Options after Office action closing prosecution in inter partes
reexamination.
1.953 Examiner's Right of Appeal Notice in inter partes reexamination.
Interviews Prohibited in Inter Partes Reexamination
1.955 Interviews prohibited in inter partes reexamination proceedings.
Extensions of Time, Termination of Proceedings, and Petitions To Revive
in Inter Partes Reexamination
1.956 Patent owner extensions of time in inter partes reexamination.
1.957 Failure to file a timely, appropriate or complete response or
comment in inter partes reexamination.
1.958 Petition to revive terminated inter partes reexamination or
claims terminated for lack of patent owner response.
Appeal to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences in Inter Partes
Reexamination
1.959 Notice of appeal and cross appeal to Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences in inter partes reexamination.
1.961 Jurisdiction over appeal in inter partes reexamination.
1.962 Appellant and respondent in inter partes reexamination defined.
1.963 Time for filing briefs in inter partes reexamination.
1.965 Appellant's brief in inter partes reexamination.
1.967 Respondent's brief in inter partes reexamination.
1.969 Examiner's answer in inter partes reexamination.
1.971 Rebuttal brief in inter partes reexamination.
1.973 Oral hearing in inter partes reexamination.
1.975 Affidavits or declarations after appeal in inter partes
reexamination.
1.977 Decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences; remand
to examiner in inter partes reexamination.
1.979 Action following decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences or dismissal of appeal in inter partes
reexamination.
1.981 Reopening after decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences in inter partes reexamination.
[[Page 12]]
Patent Owner Appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit in Inter Partes Reexamination
1.983 Patent owner appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit in inter partes reexamination.
Concurrent Proceedings Involving SSame Patent in Inte Partes
Reexamination
1.985 Notification of prior or concurrent proceedings in inter partes
reexamination.
1.987 Suspension of inter partes reexamination proceeding due to
litigation.
1.989 Merger of concurrent reexamination proceedings.
1.991 Merger of concurrent reissue application and inter partes
reexamination proceeding.
1.993 Suspension of concurrent interference and inter partes
reexamination proceeding.
1.995 Third party requester's participation rights preserved in merged
proceeding.
Reexamination Certificate in Inter Partes Reexamination
1.997 Issuance of inter partes reexamination certificate.
Authority: 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2), unless otherwise noted.
Source: 24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, unless otherwise noted.
Editorial Note: In Patent and Trademark Office publications and
usage the part number is omitted from the numbers of Secs. 1.1 to 1.352
and the numbers to the right of the decimal point correspond with the
respective rule numbers.
Subpart A--General Provisions
General Information and Correspondence
Sec. 1.1 Addresses for correspondence with the Patent and Trademark Office.
(a) Except for paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii), and (d)(1) of this
section, all correspondence intended for the United States Patent and
Trademark Office must be addressed to either ``Commissioner of Patents
and Trademarks, Washington, DC 20231'' or to specific areas within the
Office as set out in paragraphs (a)(1), (2) and (3)(iii) of this
section. When appropriate, correspondence should also be marked for the
attention of a particular office or individual.
(1) Patent correspondence. All correspondence concerning patent
matters processed by organizations reporting to the Assistant
Commissioner for Patents should be addressed to ``Assistant Commissioner
for Patents, Washington, DC 20231.''
(2) Trademark correspondence. (i) Send all trademark filings and
correspondence, except as specified below or unless submitting
electronically, to: Assistant Commissioner for Trademarks, 2900 Crystal
Drive, Arlington, Virginia 22202-3513.
(ii) Send trademark-related documents for the Assignment Division to
record to: Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Box Assignment,
Washington, DC 20231.
(iii) Send requests for certified or uncertified copies of trademark
applications and registrations, other than coupon orders for uncertified
copies of registrations, to: Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Box
10, Washington, DC 20231.
(iv) Send requests for coupon orders for uncertified copies of
registrations to: Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Box 9,
Washington, DC 20231.
(v) An applicant may transmit an application for trademark
registration electronically, but only if the applicant uses the Patent
and Trademark Office's electronic form.
(3) Office of Solicitor correspondence. (i) Correspondence relating
to pending litigation required by court rule or order to be served on
the Solicitor shall be hand-delivered to the Office of the Solicitor or
shall be mailed to: Office of the Solicitor, P.O. Box 15667, Arlington,
Virginia 22215; or such other address as may be designated in writing in
the litigation. See Secs. 1.302(c) and 2.145(b)(3) for filing a notice
of appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
(ii) Correspondence relating to disciplinary proceedings pending
before an Administrative Law Judge or the Commissioner shall be mailed
to: Office of the Solicitor, P.O. Box 16116, Arlington, Virginia 22215.
[[Page 13]]
(iii) All other correspondence to the Office of the Solicitor shall
be addressed to: Box 8, Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks,
Washington, DC 20231.
(iv) Correspondence improperly addressed to a Post Office Box
specified in paragraphs (a)(3) (i) and (ii) of this section will not be
filed elsewhere in the Patent and Trademark Office, and may be returned.
(b) Letters and other communications relating to international
applications during the international stage and prior to the assignment
of a national serial number should be additionally marked ``Box PCT.''
(c) Requests for reexamination should be additionally marked ``Box
Reexam.''
(d) Maintenance fee correspondence.--(1) Payments of maintenance
fees in patents not submitted electronically over the Internet should be
mailed to: United States Patent and Trademark Office, P.O. Box 371611,
Pittsburgh, PA 15250-1611.
(2) Correspondence related to maintenance fees other than payments
of maintenance fees in patents is not to be mailed to P.O. Box 371611,
Pittsburgh, PA 15250-1611, but must be mailed to: Box M Correspondence,
Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Washington, DC 20231.
(e) Communications relating to interferences and applications or
patents involved in an interference should be additionally marked ``BOX
INTERFERENCE.''
(f) All applications for extension of patent term and any
communications relating thereto intended for the Patent and Trademark
Office should be additionally marked ``Box Patent Ext.'' When
appropriate, the communication should also be marked to the attention of
a particular individual, as where a decision has been rendered.
(g) [Reserved]
(h) In applications under section 1(b) of the Trademark Act, 15
U.S.C. 1051(b), all statements of use filed under section 1(d) of the
Act, and requests for extensions of time therefor, should be
additionally marked ``Box ITU.''
(i) The filing of all provisional applications and any
communications relating thereto should be additionally marked ``Box
Provisional Patent Application.''
Note: Sections 1.1 to 1.26 are applicable to trademark cases as well
as to national and international patent cases except for provisions
specifically directed to patent cases. See Sec. 1.9 for definitions of
``national application'' and ``international application.''
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685)
[46 FR 29181, May 29, 1981, as amended at 49 FR 34724, Aug. 31, 1984; 49
FR 48451, Dec. 12, 1984; 52 FR 9394, Mar. 24, 1987; 53 FR 16413, May 9,
1988; 54 FR 37588, Sept. 11, 1989; 60 FR 20220, Apr. 25, 1995; 61 FR
56446, Nov. 1, 1996; 64 FR 48917, Sept. 8, 1999; 67 FR 39448, July 31,
2002]
Sec. 1.2 Business to be transacted in writing.
All business with the Patent and Trademark Office should be
transacted in writing. The personal attendance of applicants or their
attorneys or agents at the Patent and Trademark Office is unnecessary.
The action of the Patent and Trademark Office will be based exclusively
on the written record in the Office. No attention will be paid to any
alleged oral promise, stipulation, or understanding in relation to which
there is disagreement or doubt.
Sec. 1.3 Business to be conducted with decorum and courtesy.
Applicants and their attorneys or agents are required to conduct
their business with the Patent and Trademark Office with decorum and
courtesy. Papers presented in violation of this requirement will be
submitted to the Commissioner and will be returned by the Commissioner's
direct order. Complaints against examiners and other employees must be
made in correspondence separate from other papers.
[61 FR 56446, Nov. 1, 1996]
Sec. 1.4 Nature of correspondence and signature requirements.
(a) Correspondence with the Patent and Trademark Office comprises:
(1) Correspondence relating to services and facilities of the
Office, such as general inquiries, requests for publications supplied by
the Office, orders for printed copies of patents or trademark
registrations, orders for copies of
[[Page 14]]
records, transmission of assignments for recording, and the like, and
(2) Correspondence in and relating to a particular application or
other proceeding in the Office. See particularly the rules relating to
the filing, processing, or other proceedings of national applications in
subpart B, Secs. 1.31 to 1.378; of international applications in subpart
C, Secs. 1.401 to 1.499; of ex parte reexaminations of patents in
subpart D, Secs. 1.501 to 1.570; of interferences in subpart E,
Secs. 1.601 to 1.690; of extension of patent term in subpart F,
Secs. 1.710 to 1.785; of inter partes reexaminations of patents in
subpart H, Secs. 1.902 to 1.997; and of trademark applications
Secs. 2.11 to 2.189.
(b) Since each file must be complete in itself, a separate copy of
every paper to be filed in a patent or trademark application, patent
file, trademark registration file, or other proceeding must be furnished
for each file to which the paper pertains, even though the contents of
the papers filed in two or more files may be identical. The filing of
duplicate copies of correspondence in the file of an application,
patent, trademark registration file, or other proceeding should be
avoided, except in situations in which the Office requires the filing of
duplicate copies. The Office may dispose of duplicate copies of
correspondence in the file of an application, patent, trademark
registration file, or other proceeding.
(c) Since different matters may be considered by different branches
or sections of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, each
distinct subject, inquiry or order must be contained in a separate paper
to avoid confusion and delay in answering papers dealing with different
subjects.
(d)(1) Each piece of correspondence, except as provided in
paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section, filed in an application, patent
file, trademark registration file, or other proceeding in the Office
which requires a person's signature, must:
(i) Be an original, that is, have an original signature personally
signed in permanent ink by that person; or
(ii) Be a direct or indirect copy, such as a photocopy or facsimile
transmission(Sec. 1.6(d)), of an original. In the event that a copy of
the original is filed, the original should be retained as evidence of
authenticity. If a question of authenticity arises, the Office may
require submission of the original; or
(iii) Where an electronically transmitted trademark filing is
permitted, the person who signs the filing must either:
(A) Place a symbol comprised of numbers and/or letters between two
forward slash marks in the signature block on the electronic submission;
and print, sign and date in permanent ink, and maintain a paper copy of
the electronic submission; or
(B) Sign the verified statement using some other form of electronic
signature specified by the Commissioner.
(2) The presentation to the Office (whether by signing, filing,
submitting, or later advocating) of any paper by a party, whether a
practitioner or non-practitioner, constitutes a certification under
Sec. 10.18(b) of this chapter. Violations of Sec. 10.18(b)(2) of this
chapter by a party, whether a practitioner or non-practitioner, may
result in the imposition of sanctions under Sec. 10.18(c) of this
chapter. Any practitioner violating Sec. 10.18(b) may also be subject to
disciplinary action. See Secs. 10.18(d) and 10.23(c)(15).
(e) Correspondence requiring a person's signature and relating to
registration to practice before the Patent and Trademark Office in
patent cases, enrollment and disciplinary investigations, or
disciplinary proceedings must be submitted with an original signature
personally signed in permanent ink by that person.
(f) When a document that is required by statute to be certified must
be filed, a copy, including a photocopy or facsimile transmission, of
the certification is not acceptable.
(g) An applicant who has not made of record a registered attorney or
agent may be required to state whether assistance was received in the
preparation or prosecution of the patent application, for which any
compensation or consideration was given or charged, and if so, to
disclose the name or names of the person or persons providing such
assistance. Assistance includes the preparation for the applicant of the
specification and amendments or other papers to be filed in the
[[Page 15]]
Patent and Trademark Office, as well as other assistance in such
matters, but does not include merely making drawings by draftsmen or
stenographic services in typing papers.
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685; 35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 48 FR 2707, Jan. 20, 1982; 49
FR 48451, Dec. 12, 1984; 53 FR 47807, Nov. 28, 1988; 58 FR 54501, Oct.
22, 1993; 62 FR 53180, Oct. 10, 1997; 64 FR 48917, Sept. 8, 1999; 65 FR
54656, Sept. 8, 2000; 66 FR 76772, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.5 Identification of application, patent or registration.
(a) No correspondence relating to an application should be filed
prior to receipt of the application number from the Patent and Trademark
Office. When a letter directed to the Patent and Trademark Office
concerns a previously filed application for a patent, it must identify
on the top page in a conspicuous location, the application number
(consisting of the series code and the serial number; e.g., 07/123,456),
or the serial number and filing date assigned to that application by the
Patent and Trademark Office, or the international application number of
the international application. Any correspondence not containing such
identification will be returned to the sender where a return address is
available. The returned correspondence will be accompanied by a cover
letter which will indicate to the sender that if the returned
correspondence is resubmitted to the Patent and Trademark Office within
two weeks of the mailing date on the cover letter, the original date of
receipt of the correspondence will be considered by the Patent and
Trademark Office as the date of receipt of the correspondence.
Applicants may use either the Certificate of Mailing or Transmission
procedure under Sec. 1.8 or the Express Mail procedure under Sec. 1.10
for resubmissions of returned correspondence if they desire to have the
benefit of the date of deposit with the United States Postal Service. If
the returned correspondence is not resubmitted within the two-week
period, the date of receipt of the resubmission will be considered to be
the date of receipt of the correspondence. The two-week period to
resubmit the returned correspondence will not be extended. In addition
to the application number, all letters directed to the Patent and
Trademark Office concerning applications for patents should also state
the name of the applicant, the title of the invention, the date of
filing the same, and, if known, the group art unit or other unit within
the Patent and Trademark Office responsible for considering the letter
and the name of the examiner or other person to which it has been
assigned.
(b) When the letter concerns a patent other than for purposes of
paying a maintenance fee, it should state the number and date of issue
of the patent, the name of the patentee, and the title of the invention.
For letters concerning payment of a maintenance fee in a patent, see the
provisions of Sec. 1.366(c).
(c)(1) A letter about a trademark application should identify the
serial number, the name of the applicant, and the mark.
(2) A letter about a registered trademark should identify the
registration number, the name of the registrant, and the mark.
(d) A letter relating to a reexamination proceeding should identify
it as such by the number of the patent undergoing reexamination, the
reexamination request control number assigned to such proceeding and, if
known, the group art unit and name of the examiner to which it has been
assigned.
(e) When a paper concerns an interference, it should state the names
of the parties and the number of the interference. The name of the
examiner-in-chief assigned to the interference (Sec. 1.610) and the name
of the party filing the paper should appear conspicuously on the first
page of the paper.
(f) When a paper concerns a provisional application, it should
identify the application as such and include the application number.
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685; 35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 46 FR 29181, May 29, 1981; 49
FR 552, Jan. 4, 1984; 49 FR 48451, Dec. 12, 1984; 53 FR 47807, Nov. 28,
1988; 58 FR 54501, Oct. 22, 1993;61 FR 42802, Aug. 19, 1996; 61 FR
56446, Nov. 1, 1996; 64 FR 48917, Sept. 8, 1999]
[[Page 16]]
Sec. 1.6 Receipt of correspondence.
(a) Date of receipt and Express Mail date of deposit. Correspondence
received in the Patent and Trademark Office is stamped with the date of
receipt except as follows:
(1) The Patent and Trademark Office is not open for the filing of
correspondence on any day that is a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday
within the District of Columbia. Except for correspondence transmitted
by facsimile under paragraph (a)(3) of this section, or filed
electronically under paragraph (a)(4) of this section, no correspondence
is received in the Office on Saturdays, Sundays, or Federal holidays
within the District of Columbia.
(2) Correspondence filed in accordance with Sec. 1.10 will be
stamped with the date of deposit as ``Express Mail'' with the United
States Postal Service.
(3) Correspondence transmitted by facsimile to the Patent and
Trademark Office will be stamped with the date on which the complete
transmission is received in the Patent and Trademark Office unless that
date is a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday within the District of
Columbia, in which case the date stamped will be the next succeeding day
which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday within the District
of Columbia.
(4) Trademark-related correspondence transmitted electronically will
be stamped with the date on which the Office receives the transmission.
(b) Patent and Trademark Office Post Office pouch. Mail placed in
the Patent and Trademark Office pouch up to midnight on any day, except
Saturdays, Sundays and Federal holidays within the District of Columbia,
by the post office at Washington, DC, serving the Patent and Trademark
Office, is considered as having been received in the Patent and
Trademark Office on the day it was so placed in the pouch by the U.S.
Postal Service.
(c) Correspondence delivered by hand. In addition to being mailed,
correspondence may be delivered by hand during hours the Office is open
to receive correspondence.
(d) Facsimile transmission. Except in the cases enumerated below,
correspondence, including authorizations to charge a deposit account,
may be transmitted by facsimile. The receipt date accorded to the
correspondence will be the date on which the complete transmission is
received in the Patent and Trademark Office, unless that date is a
Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday within the District of Columbia.
See Sec. 1.6(a)(3). To facilitate proper processing, each transmission
session should be limited to correspondence to be filed in a single
application or other proceeding before the Patent and Trademark Office.
The application number of a patent or trademark application, the control
number of a reexamination proceeding, the interference number of an
interference proceeding, the patent number of a patent, or the
registration number of a trademark should be entered as a part of the
sender's identification on a facsimile cover sheet. Facsimile
transmissions are not permitted and if submitted, will not be accorded a
date of receipt, in the following situations:
(1) Correspondence as specified in Sec. 1.4(e), requiring an
original signature;
(2) Certified documents as specified in Sec. 1.4(f);
(3) Correspondence which cannot receive the benefit of the
certificate of mailing or transmission as specified in Sec. 1.8(a)(2)(i)
(A) through (D) and (F), Sec. 1.8(a)(2)(ii)(A), and
Sec. 1.8(a)(2)(iii)(A), except that a continued prosecution application
under Sec. 1.53(d) may be transmitted to the Office by facsimile;
(4) Drawings submitted under Secs. 1.81, 1.83 through 1.85, 1.152,
1.165, 1.174, 1.437, 2.51, 2.52, or 2.72;
(5) A request for reexamination under Sec. 1.510 or Sec. 1.913;
(6) Correspondence to be filed in a patent application subject to a
secrecy order under Secs. 5.1 through 5.5 of this chapter and directly
related to the secrecy order content of the application;
(7) Requests for cancellation or amendment of a registration under
section 7(e) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. 1057(e); and certificates
of registration surrendered for cancellation or amendment under section
7(e) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. 1057(e);
(8) Correspondence to be filed with the Trademark Trial and Appeal
Board, except the notice of ex parte appeal;
(9) Correspondence to be filed in an interference proceeding which
consists
[[Page 17]]
of a preliminary statement under Sec. 1.621; a transcript of a
deposition under Sec. 1.676 or of interrogatories, or cross-
interrogatories; or an evidentiary record and exhibits under Sec. 1.653.
(e) Interruptions in U.S. Postal Service. If interruptions or
emergencies in the United States Postal Service which have been so
designated by the Commissioner occur, the Patent and Trademark Office
will consider as filed on a particular date in the Office any
correspondence which is:
(1) Promptly filed after the ending of the designated interruption
or emergency; and
(2) Accompanied by a statement indicating that such correspondence
would have been filed on that particular date if it were not for the
designated interruption or emergency in the United States Postal
Service.
(f) Facsimile transmission of a patent application under
Sec. 1.53(d). In the event that the Office has no evidence of receipt of
an application under Sec. 1.53(d) (a continued prosecution application)
transmitted to the Office by facsimile transmission, the party who
transmitted the application under Sec. 1.53(d) may petition the
Commissioner to accord the application under Sec. 1.53(d) a filing date
as of the date the application under Sec. 1.53(d) is shown to have been
transmitted to and received in the Office,
(1) Provided that the party who transmitted such application under
Sec. 1.53(d):
(i) Informs the Office of the previous transmission of the
application under Sec. 1.53(d) promptly after becoming aware that the
Office has no evidence of receipt of the application under Sec. 1.53(d);
(ii) Supplies an additional copy of the previously transmitted
application under Sec. 1.53(d); and
(iii) Includes a statement which attests on a personal knowledge
basis or to the satisfaction of the Commissioner to the previous
transmission of the application under Sec. 1.53(d) and is accompanied by
a copy of the sending unit's report confirming transmission of the
application under Sec. 1.53(d) or evidence that came into being after
the complete transmission and within one business day of the complete
transmission of the application under Sec. 1.53(d).
(2) The Office may require additional evidence to determine if the
application under Sec. 1.53(d) was transmitted to and received in the
Office on the date in question.
[58 FR 54501, Oct. 22, 1993; 58 FR 64154, Dec. 6, 1993; 61 FR 56447,
Nov. 1, 1996; 62 FR 53180, Oct. 10, 1997; 64 FR 48917, Sept. 8, 1999; 65
FR 54657, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 76772, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.7 Times for taking action; Expiration on Saturday, Sunday or Federal holiday.
(a) Whenever periods of time are specified in this part in days,
calendar days are intended. When the day, or the last day fixed by
statute or by or under this part for taking any action or paying any fee
in the United States Patent and Trademark Office falls on Saturday,
Sunday, or on a Federal holiday within the District of Columbia, the
action may be taken, or the fee paid, on the next succeeding business
day which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal holiday. See
Sec. 1.304 for time for appeal or for commencing civil action.
(b) If the day that is twelve months after the filing date of a
provisional application under 35 U.S.C. 111(b) and Sec. 1.53(c) falls on
Saturday, Sunday, or on a Federal holiday within the District of
Columbia, the period of pendency shall be extended to the next
succeeding secular or business day which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or a
Federal holiday.
[65 FR 14871, Mar. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.8 Certificate of mailing or transmission.
(a) Except in the cases enumerated in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, correspondence required to be filed in the Patent and Trademark
Office within a set period of time will be considered as being timely
filed if the procedure described in this section is followed. The actual
date of receipt will be used for all other purposes.
(1) Correspondence will be considered as being timely filed if:
(i) The correspondence is mailed or transmitted prior to expiration
of the set period of time by being:
(A) Addressed as set out in Sec. 1.1(a) and deposited with the U.S.
Postal
[[Page 18]]
Service with sufficient postage as first class mail; or
(B) Transmitted by facsimile to the Patent and Trademark Office in
accordance with Sec. 1.6(d); and
(ii) The correspondence includes a certificate for each piece of
correspondence stating the date of deposit or transmission. The person
signing the certificate should have reasonable basis to expect that the
correspondence would be mailed or transmitted on or before the date
indicated.
(2) The procedure described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section does
not apply to, and no benefit will be given to a Certificate of Mailing
or Transmission on the following:
(i) Relative to Patents and Patent Applications--
(A) The filing of a national patent application specification and
drawing or other correspondence for the purpose of obtaining an
application filing date, including a request for a continued prosecution
application under Sec. 1.53(d);
(B) The filing of correspondence in an interference which an
examiner-in-chief orders to be filed by hand or ``Express Mail'';
(C) The filing of agreements between parties to an interference
under 35 U.S.C. 135(c);
(D) The filing of an international application for patent;
(E) The filing of correspondence in an international application
before the U.S. Receiving Office, the U.S. International Searching
Authority, or the U.S. International Preliminary Examining Authority;
(F) The filing of a copy of the international application and the
basic national fee necessary to enter the national stage, as specified
in Sec. 1.495(b).
(ii) Relative to Trademark Registrations and Trademark Applications-
-
(A) The filing of a trademark application.
(B)-(F) [Reserved]
(iii) Relative to Disciplinary Proceedings--
(A) Correspondence filed in connection with a disciplinary
proceeding under part 10 of this chapter.
(B) [Reserved]
(b) In the event that correspondence is considered timely filed by
being mailed or transmitted in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section, but not received in the Patent and Trademark Office, and the
application is held to be abandoned or the proceeding is dismissed,
terminated, or decided with prejudice, the correspondence will be
considered timely if the party who forwarded such correspondence:
(1) Informs the Office of the previous mailing or transmission of
the correspondence promptly after becoming aware that the Office has no
evidence of receipt of the correspondence;
(2) Supplies an additional copy of the previously mailed or
transmitted correspondence and certificate; and
(3) Includes a statement which attests on a personal knowledge basis
or to the satisfaction of the Commissioner to the previous timely
mailing or transmission. If the correspondence was sent by facsimile
transmission, a copy of the sending unit's report confirming
transmission may be used to support this statement.
(c) The Office may require additional evidence to determine if the
correspondence was timely filed.
[58 FR 54502, Oct. 22, 1993; 58 FR 64154, Dec. 6, 1993, as amended at 61
FR 56447, Nov. 1, 1996; 62 FR 53181, Oct. 10, 1997; 67 FR 523, Jan. 4,
2002]
Sec. 1.9 Definitions.
(a)(1) A national application as used in this chapter means a U.S.
application for patent which was either filed in the Office under 35
U.S.C. 111, or which entered the national stage from an international
application after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371.
(2) A provisional application as used in this chapter means a U.S.
national application for patent filed in the Office under 35 U.S.C.
111(b).
(3) A nonprovisional application as used in this chapter means a
U.S. national application for patent which was either filed in the
Office under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), or which entered the national stage from
an international application after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371.
(b) An international application as used in this chapter means an
international application for patent filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty prior to entering national processing at the Designated Office
stage.
[[Page 19]]
(c) A published application as used in this chapter means an
application for patent which has been published under 35 U.S.C. 122(b).
(d)-(f) [Reserved]
(g) For definitions in interferences see Sec. 1.601.
(h) A Federal holiday within the District of Columbia as used in
this chapter means any day, except Saturdays and Sundays, when the
Patent and Trademark Office is officially closed for business for the
entire day.
(i) National security classified as used in this chapter means
specifically authorized under criteria established by an Act of Congress
or Executive Order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense
or foreign policy and, in fact, properly classified pursuant to such Act
of Congress or Executive Order.
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685; 35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247; 15 U.S.C.
1113, 1123)
[43 FR 20461, May 11, 1978, as amended at 47 FR 40139, Sept. 10, 1982;
47 FR 43275, Sept. 30, 1982; 49 FR 48451, Dec. 12, 1984; 60 FR 20220,
Apr. 25, 1995; 61 FR 56447, Nov. 1, 1996; 62 FR 53181, Oct. 10, 1997; 65
FR 54657, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57051, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.10 Filing of correspondence by ``Express Mail.''
(a)(1) Any correspondence received by the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office (USPTO) that was delivered by the ``Express Mail Post Office to
Addressee'' service of the United States Postal Service (USPS) will be
considered filed with the USPTO on the date of deposit with the USPS,
except for documents described in the following paragraphs (a)(1)(i) and
(ii) of this section:
(i) Trademark applications filed under section 1 or 44 of the
Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. 1051 and 1126.
(ii) Other documents for which a Trademark Electronic Application
System (TEAS) form exists:
(A) Amendment to allege use under section 1(c) of the Trademark Act,
15 U.S.C. 1051(c);
(B) Statement of use under section 1(d) of the Trademark Act, 15
U.S.C. 1051(d);
(C) Request for extension of time to file a statement of use under
section 1(d) of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C. 1051(d);
(D) Affidavit of continued use under section 8 of the Trademark Act,
15 U.S.C. 1058;
(E) Renewal request under section 9 of the Trademark Act, 15 U.S.C.
1059; and
(F) Requests to change or correct addresses.
(2) The date of deposit with USPS is shown by the ``date in'' on the
``Express Mail'' label or other official USPS notation. If the USPS
deposit date cannot be determined, the correspondence will be accorded
the USPTO receipt date as the filing date. See Sec. 1.6(a).
(b) Correspondence should be deposited directly with an employee of
the USPS to ensure that the person depositing the correspondence
receives a legible copy of the ``Express Mail'' mailing label with the
``date-in'' clearly marked. Persons dealing indirectly with the
employees of the USPS (such as by deposit in an ``Express Mail'' drop
box) do so at the risk of not receiving a copy of the ``Express Mail''
mailing label with the desired ``date-in'' clearly marked. The paper(s)
or fee(s) that constitute the correspondence should also include the
``Express Mail'' mailing label number thereon. See paragraphs (c), (d)
and (e) of this section.
(c) Any person filing correspondence under this section that was
received by the Office and delivered by the ``Express Mail Post Office
to Addressee'' service of the USPS, who can show that there is a
discrepancy between the filing date accorded by the Office to the
correspondence and the date of deposit as shown by the ``date-in'' on
the ``Express Mail'' mailing label or other official USPS notation, may
petition the Commissioner to accord the correspondence a filing date as
of the ``date-in'' on the ``Express Mail'' mailing label or other
official USPS notation, provided that:
(1) The petition is filed promptly after the person becomes aware
that the Office has accorded, or will accord, a filing date other than
the USPS deposit date;
(2) The number of the ``Express Mail'' mailing label was placed on
the
[[Page 20]]
paper(s) or fee(s) that constitute the correspondence prior to the
original mailing by ``Express Mail;'' and
(3) The petition includes a true copy of the ``Express Mail''
mailing label showing the ``date-in,'' and of any other official
notation by the USPS relied upon to show the date of deposit.
(d) Any person filing correspondence under this section that was
received by the Office and delivered by the ``Express Mail Post Office
to Addressee'' service of the USPS, who can show that the ``date-in'' on
the ``Express Mail'' mailing label or other official notation entered by
the USPS was incorrectly entered or omitted by the USPS, may petition
the Commissioner to accord the correspondence a filing date as of the
date the correspondence is shown to have been deposited with the USPS,
provided that:
(1) The petition is filed promptly after the person becomes aware
that the Office has accorded, or will accord, a filing date based upon
an incorrect entry by the USPS;
(2) The number of the ``Express Mail'' mailing label was placed on
the paper(s) or fee(s) that constitute the correspondence prior to the
original mailing by ``Express Mail''; and
(3) The petition includes a showing which establishes, to the
satisfaction of the Commissioner, that the requested filing date was the
date the correspondence was deposited in the ``Express Mail Post Office
to Addressee'' service prior to the last scheduled pickup for that day.
Any showing pursuant to this paragraph must be corroborated by evidence
from the USPS or that came into being after deposit and within one
business day of the deposit of the correspondence in the ``Express Mail
Post Office to Addressee'' service of the USPS.
(e) Any person mailing correspondence addressed as set out in
Sec. 1.1(a) to the Office with sufficient postage utilizing the
``Express Mail Post Office to Addressee'' service of the USPS but not
received by the Office, may petition the Commissioner to consider such
correspondence filed in the Office on the USPS deposit date, provided
that:
(1) The petition is filed promptly after the person becomes aware
that the Office has no evidence of receipt of the correspondence;
(2) The number of the ``Express Mail'' mailing label was placed on
the paper(s) or fee(s) that constitute the correspondence prior to the
original mailing by ``Express Mail'';
(3) The petition includes a copy of the originally deposited
paper(s) or fee(s) that constitute the correspondence showing the number
of the ``Express Mail'' mailing label thereon, a copy of any returned
postcard receipt, a copy of the ``Express Mail'' mailing label showing
the ``date-in,'' a copy of any other official notation by the USPS
relied upon to show the date of deposit, and, if the requested filing
date is a date other than the ``date-in'' on the ``Express Mail''
mailing label or other official notation entered by the USPS, a showing
pursuant to paragraph (d)(3) of this section that the requested filing
date was the date the correspondence was deposited in the ``Express Mail
Post Office to Addressee'' service prior to the last scheduled pickup
for that day; and
(4) The petition includes a statement which establishes, to the
satisfaction of the Commissioner, the original deposit of the
correspondence and that the copies of the correspondence, the copy of
the ``Express Mail'' mailing label, the copy of any returned postcard
receipt, and any official notation entered by the USPS are true copies
of the originally mailed correspondence, original ``Express Mail''
mailing label, returned postcard receipt, and official notation entered
by the USPS.
(f) The Office may require additional evidence to determine if the
correspondence was deposited as ``Express Mail'' with the USPS on the
date in question.
[61 FR 56447, Nov. 1, 1996 as amended at 62 FR 53181, Oct. 10, 1997; 67
FR 36101, May 23, 2002]
Records and Files of the Patent and Trademark Office
Sec. 1.11 Files open to the public.
(a) The specification, drawings, and all papers relating to the file
of an
[[Page 21]]
abandoned published application, except if a redacted copy of the
application was used for the patent application publication, a patent,
or a statutory invention registration are open to inspection by the
public, and copies may be obtained upon the payment of the fee set forth
in Sec. 1.19(b)(2). See Sec. 2.27 for trademark files.
(b) All reissue applications, all applications in which the Office
has accepted a request to open the complete application to inspection by
the public, and related papers in the application file, are open to
inspection by the public, and copies may be furnished upon paying the
fee therefor. The filing of reissue applications, other than continued
prosecution applications under Sec. 1.53(d) of reissue applications,
will be announced in the Official Gazette. The announcement shall
include at least the filing date, reissue application and original
patent numbers, title, class and subclass, name of the inventor, name of
the owner of record, name of the attorney or agent of record, and
examining group to which the reissue application is assigned.
(c) All requests for reexamination for which the fee under
Sec. 1.20(c) has been paid, will be announced in the Official Gazette.
Any reexaminations at the initiative of the Commissioner pursuant to
Sec. 1.520 will also be announced in the Official Gazette. The
announcement shall include at least the date of the request, if any, the
reexamination request control number or the Commissioner initiated order
control number, patent number, title, class and subclass, name of the
inventor, name of the patent owner of record, and the examining group to
which the reexamination is assigned.
(d) All papers or copies thereof relating to a reexamination
proceeding which have been entered of record in the patent or
reexamination file are open to inspection by the general public, and
copies may be furnished upon paying the fee therefor.
(e) The file of any interference involving a patent, a statutory
invention registration, a reissue application, or an application on
which a patent has been issued or which has been published as a
statutory invention registration, is open to inspection by the public,
and copies may be obtained upon paying the fee therefor, if:
(1) The interference has terminated or
(2) An award of priority or judgment has been entered as to all
parties and all counts.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[46 FR 29181, May 29, 1981, as amended at 47 FR 41272, Sept. 17, 1982;
50 FR 9378, Mar. 7, 1985; 60 FR 14518, Mar. 17, 1995; 62 FR 53181, Oct.
10, 1997; 65 FR 57051, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.12 Assignment records open to public inspection.
(a)(1) Separate assignment records are maintained in the United
States Patent and Trademark Office for patents and trademarks. The
assignment records, relating to original or reissue patents, including
digests and indexes (for assignments recorded on or after May 1, 1957),
published patent applications, and assignment records relating to
pending or abandoned trademark applications and to trademark
registrations (for assignments recorded on or after January 1, 1955),
are open to public inspection at the United States Patent and Trademark
Office, and copies of those assignment records may be obtained upon
request and payment of the fee set forth in Sec. 1.19 and Sec. 2.6 of
this chapter.
(2) All records of assignments of patents recorded before May 1,
1957, and all records of trademark assignments recorded before January
1, 1955, are maintained by the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). The records are open to public inspection.
Certified and uncertified copies of those assignment records are
provided by NARA upon request and payment of the fees required by NARA.
(b) Assignment records, digests, and indexes relating to any pending
or abandoned patent application which has not been published under 35
U.S.C. 122(b) are not available to the public. Copies of any such
assignment records and related information shall be obtainable only upon
written authority of the applicant or applicant's assignee or attorney
or agent or upon a showing that the person seeking such information is a
bona fide prospective or actual purchaser, mortgagee, or licensee of
[[Page 22]]
such application, unless it shall be necessary to the proper conduct of
business before the Office or as provided in this part.
(c) Any request by a member of the public seeking copies of any
assignment records of any pending or abandoned patent application
preserved in confidence under Sec. 1.14, or any information with respect
thereto, must:
(1) Be in the form of a petition including the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(h); or
(2) Include written authority granting access to the member of the
public to the particular assignment records from the applicant or
applicant's assignee or attorney or agent of record.
(d) An order for a copy of an assignment or other document should
identify the reel and frame number where the assignment or document is
recorded. If a document is identified without specifying its correct
reel and frame, an extra charge as set forth in Sec. 1.21(j) will be
made for the time consumed in making a search for such assignment.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[47 FR 41272, Sept. 17, 1982, as amended at 54 FR 6900, Feb. 15, 1989;
56 FR 65151, Dec. 13, 1991; 56 FR 66670, Dec. 24, 1991; 57 FR 29641,
July 6, 1992; 60 FR 20221, Apr. 25, 1995; 61 FR 42802, Aug. 19, 1996; 65
FR 54657, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57051, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.13 Copies and certified copies.
(a) Non-certified copies of patents, patent application
publications, and trademark registrations and of any records, books,
papers, or drawings within the jurisdiction of the United States Patent
and Trademark Office and open to the public, will be furnished by the
United States Patent and Trademark Office to any person, and copies of
other records or papers will be furnished to persons entitled thereto,
upon payment of the appropriate fee.
(b) Certified copies of patents, patent application publications,
and trademark registrations and of any records, books, papers, or
drawings within the jurisdiction of the United States Patent and
Trademark Office and open to the public or persons entitled thereto will
be authenticated by the seal of the United States Patent and Trademark
Office and certified by the Commissioner, or in his or her name attested
by an officer of the United States Patent and Trademark Office
authorized by the Commissioner, upon payment of the fee for the
certified copy.
[65 FR 57051, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.14 Patent applications preserved in confidence.
(a) Confidentiality of patent application information. Patent
applications that have not been published under 35 U.S.C. 122(b) are
generally preserved in confidence pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 122(a).
Information concerning the filing, pendency, or subject matter of an
application for patent, including status information, and access to the
application, will only be given to the public as set forth in Sec. 1.11
or in this section.
(1) Status information is:
(i) Whether the application is pending, abandoned, or patented;
(ii) Whether the application has been published under 35 U.S.C.
122(b); and
(iii) The application ``numerical identifier'' which may be:
(A) The eight-digit application number (the two-digit series code
plus the six-digit serial number); or
(B) The six-digit serial number plus any one of the filing date of
the national application, the international filing date, or date of
entry into the national stage.
(2) Access is defined as providing the application file for review
and copying of any material in the application file.
(b) When status information may be supplied. Status information of
an application may be supplied by the Office to the public if any of the
following apply:
(1) Access to the application is available pursuant to paragraph (e)
of this section;
(2) The application is referred to by its numerical identifier in a
published patent document (e.g., a U.S. patent, a U.S. patent
application publication, or an international application publication),
or in a U.S. application open to public inspection (Sec. 1.11(b), or
paragraph (e)(2)(i) or (e)(2)(ii) of this section);
(3) The application is a published international application in
which the United States of America has been indicated as a designated
state; or
[[Page 23]]
(4) The application claims the benefit of the filing date of an
application for which status information may be provided pursuant to
paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(3) of this section.
(c) When copies may be supplied. A copy of an application-as-filed
or a file wrapper and contents may be supplied by the Office to the
public, subject to paragraph (i) of this section (which addresses
international applications), if any of the following apply:
(1) Application-as-filed.
(i) If a U.S. patent application publication or patent incorporates
by reference, or includes a specific reference under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) or
120 to, a pending or abandoned application, a copy of that application-
as-filed may be provided to any person upon written request including
the fee set forth in Sec. 1.19(b)(1); or
(ii) If an international application, which designates the U.S. and
which has been published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2),
incorporates by reference or claims priority under PCT Article 8 to a
pending or abandoned U.S. application, a copy of that application-as-
filed may be provided to any person upon written request including a
showing that the publication of the application in accordance with PCT
Article 21(2) has occurred and that the U.S. was designated, and upon
payment of the appropriate fee set forth in Sec. 1.19(b)(1).
(2) File wrapper and contents. A copy of the specification,
drawings, and all papers relating to the file of an abandoned or pending
published application may be provided to any person upon written
request, including the fee set forth in Sec. 1.19(b)(2). If a redacted
copy of the application was used for the patent application publication,
the copy of the specification, drawings, and papers may be limited to a
redacted copy.
(d) Power to inspect a pending or abandoned application. Access to
an application may be provided to any person if the application file is
available, and the application contains written authority (e.g., a power
to inspect) granting access to such person. The written authority must
be signed by:
(1) An applicant;
(2) An attorney or agent of record;
(3) An authorized official of an assignee of record (made of record
pursuant to Sec. 3.71 of this chapter); or
(4) A registered attorney or agent named in the papers accompanying
the application papers filed under Sec. 1.53 or the national stage
documents filed under Sec. 1.495, if an executed oath or declaration
pursuant to Sec. 1.63 or Sec. 1.497 has not been filed.
(e) Public access to a pending or abandoned application. Access to
an application may be provided to any person, subject to paragraph (i)
of this section, if a written request for access is submitted, the
application file is available, and any of the following apply:
(1) The application is open to public inspection pursuant to
Sec. 1.11(b); or
(2) The application is abandoned, it is not within the file jacket
of a pending application under Sec. 1.53(d), and it is referred to:
(i) In a U.S. patent application publication or patent;
(ii) In another U.S. application which is open to public inspection
either pursuant to Sec. 1.11(b) or paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section;
or
(iii) In an international application which designates the U.S. and
is published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2).
(f) Applications reported to Department of Energy. Applications for
patents which appear to disclose, purport to disclose or do disclose
inventions or discoveries relating to atomic energy are reported to the
Department of Energy, which Department will be given access to the
applications. Such reporting does not constitute a determination that
the subject matter of each application so reported is in fact useful or
is an invention or discovery, or that such application in fact discloses
subject matter in categories specified by 42 U.S.C. 2181(c) and (d).
(g) Decisions by the Commissioner or the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences. Any decision by the Commissioner or the Board of Patent
Appeals and Interferences which would not otherwise be open to public
inspection may be published or made available for public inspection if:
(1) The Commissioner believes the decision involves an
interpretation of
[[Page 24]]
patent laws or regulations that would be of precedential value; and
(2) The applicant, or a party involved in an interference for which
a decision was rendered, is given notice and an opportunity to object in
writing within two months on the ground that the decision discloses a
trade secret or other confidential information. Any objection must
identify the deletions in the text of the decision considered necessary
to protect the information, or explain why the entire decision must be
withheld from the public to protect such information. An applicant or
party will be given time, not less than twenty days, to request
reconsideration and seek court review before any portions of a decision
are made public under this paragraph over his or her objection.
(h) Publication pursuant to Sec. 1.47. Information as to the filing
of an application will be published in the Official Gazette in
accordance with Sec. 1.47(c).
(i) International applications.
(1) Copies of international application files for international
applications which designate the U.S. and which have been published in
accordance with PCT Article 21(2), or copies of a document in such
application files, will be furnished in accordance with PCT Articles 30
and 38 and PCT Rules 94.2 and 94.3, upon written request including a
showing that the publication of the application has occurred and that
the U.S. was designated, and upon payment of the appropriate fee (see
Sec. 1.19(b)(2) or 1.19(b)(3)), if:
(i) With respect to the Home Copy, the international application was
filed with the U.S. Receiving Office;
(ii) With respect to the Search Copy, the U.S. acted as the
International Searching Authority; or
(iii) With respect to the Examination Copy, the United States acted
as the International Preliminary Examining Authority, an International
Preliminary Examination Report has issued, and the United States was
elected.
(2) A copy of an English language translation of an international
application which has been filed in the United States Patent and
Trademark Office pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 154(d)(4) will be furnished upon
written request including a showing that the publication of the
application in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) has occurred and that
the U.S. was designated, and upon payment of the appropriate fee
(Sec. 1.19(b)(2) or Sec. 1.19(b)(3)).
(3) Access to international application files for international
applications which designate the U.S. and which have been published in
accordance with PCT Article 21(2), or copies of a document in such
application files, will be furnished in accordance with PCT Articles 30
and 38 and PCT Rules 94.2 and 94.3, upon written request including a
showing that the publication of the application has occurred and that
the U.S. was designated.
(4) In accordance with PCT Article 30, copies of an international
application-as-filed under paragraph (c)(1) of this section will not be
provided prior to the international publication of the application
pursuant to PCT Article 21(2).
(5) Access to international application files under paragraphs (e)
and (i)(3) of this section will not be permitted with respect to the
Examination Copy in accordance with PCT Article 38.
(j) Access or copies in other circumstances. The Office, either sua
sponte or on petition, may also provide access or copies of all or part
of an application if necessary to carry out an Act of Congress or if
warranted by other special circumstances. Any petition by a member of
the public seeking access to, or copies of, all or part of any pending
or abandoned application preserved in confidence pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section, or any related papers, must include:
(1) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h); and
(2) A showing that access to the application is necessary to carry
out an Act of Congress or that special circumstances exist which warrant
petitioner being granted access to all or part of the application.
[65 FR 54657, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57051, Sept. 20, 2000;
65 FR 78959, Dec. 18, 2000; 66 FR 67094, Dec. 28, 2001; 67 FR 523, Jan.
4, 2002]
[[Page 25]]
Sec. 1.15 Requests for identifiable records.
(a) Requests for records, not disclosed to the public as part of the
regular informational activity of the Patent and Trademark Office and
which are not otherwise dealt with in the rules in this part, shall be
made in writing, with the envelope and the letter clearly marked
``Freedom of Information Request.'' Each such request, so marked, should
be submitted by mail addressed to the ``Patent and Trademark Office,
Freedom of Information Request Control Desk, Box 8, Washington, DC
20231,'' or hand delivered to the Office of the Solicitor, Patent and
Trademark Office, Arlington, Virginia. The request will be processed in
accordance with the procedures set forth in part 4 of title 15, Code of
Federal Regulations.
(b) Any person whose request for records has been initially denied
in whole or in part, or has not been timely determined, may submit a
written appeal as provided in Sec. 4.8 of title 15, Code of Federal
Regulations.
(c) Procedures applicable in the event of service of process or in
connection with testimony of employees on official matters and
production of official documents of the Patent and Trademark Office in
civil legal proceedings not involving the United States shall be those
established in parts 15 and 15a of title 15, Code of Federal
Regulations.
[53 FR 47686, Nov. 25, 1988]
Fees and Payment of Money
Sec. 1.16 National application filing fees.
(a) Basic fee for filing each application for an original patent,
except provisional, design, or plant applications:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$370.00
By other than a small entity--$740.00
(b) In addition to the basic filing fee in an original application,
except provisional applications, for filing or later presentation of
each independent claim in excess of 3:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$42.00
By other than a small entity--$84.00
(c) In addition to the basic filing fee in an original application,
except provisional applications, for filing or later presentation of
each claim (whether independent or dependent) in excess of 20 (Note that
Sec. 1.75(c) indicates how multiple dependent claims are considered for
fee calculation purposes.):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))............................. $9.00
By other than a small entity.................................. $18.00
(d) In addition to the basic filing fee in an original application,
except provisional applications, if the application contains, or is
amended to contain, a multiple dependent claim(s), per application:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$140.00
By other than a small entity--$280.00
(e) Surcharge for filing the basic filing fee or oath or declaration
on a date later than the filing date of the application, except
provisional applications:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))............................. $65.00
By other than a small entity.................................. $130.00
(f) Basic fee for filing each design application:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$165.00
By other than a small entity--$330.00
(g) Basic fee for filing each plant application, except provisional
applications:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$255.00
By other than a small entity--$510.00
(h) Basic fee for filing each reissue application:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$370.00
By other than a small entity--$740.00
(i) In addition to the basic filing fee in a reissue application,
for filing or later presentation of each independent claim which is in
excess of the number of independent claims in the original patent:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$42.00
By other than a small entity--$84.00
(j) In addition to the basic filing fee in a reissue application,
for filing or later presentation of each claim (whether independent or
dependent) in excess of 20 and also in excess of the number of claims in
the original patent (Note that Sec. 1.75(c) indicates how multiple
dependent claims are considered for fee purposes.):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))............................. $9.00
By other than a small entity.................................. $18.00
(k) Basic fee for filing each provisional application:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$80.00
[[Page 26]]
By other than a small entity--$160.00
(l) Surcharge for filing the basic filing fee or cover sheet
(Sec. 1.51(c)(1)) on a date later than the filing date of the
provisional application:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))............................. $25.00
By other than a small entity.................................. $50.00
(m) If the additional fees required by paragraphs (b), (c), (d), (i)
and (j) of this section are not paid on filing or on later presentation
of the claims for which the additional fees are due, they must be paid
or the claims must be canceled by amendment, prior to the expiration of
the time period set for reply by the Office in any notice of fee
deficiency.
Note: See Secs. 1.445, 1.482 and 1.492 for international application
filing and processing fees.
[56 FR 65151, Dec. 13, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 38194, Aug. 21, 1992;
60 FR 20221, Apr. 25, 1995; 60 FR 41022, Aug. 11, 1995; 61 FR 39587,
July 30, 1996; 61 FR 43400, Aug. 22, 1996; 62 FR 40452, July 29, 1997;
62 FR 53182, Oct. 10, 1997; 63 FR 67579, Dec. 8, 1998; 64 FR 67777, Dec.
3, 1999; 65 FR 49195, Aug. 11, 2000; 65 FR 78959, Dec. 18, 2000; 66 FR
39449, July 31, 2001]
Sec. 1.17 Patent application and reexamination processing fees.
(a) Extension fees pursuant to Sec. 1.136(a):
(1) For reply within first month:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a)).......................... $55.00
By other than a small entity............................... $110.00
(2) For reply within second month:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$200.00
By other than a small entity--$400.00
(3) For reply within third month:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$460.00
By other than a small entity--$920.00
(4) For reply within fourth month:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$720.00
By other than a small entity--$1,440.00
(5) For reply within fifth month:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$980.00
By other than a small entity--$1,960.00
(b) For filing a notice of appeal from the examiner to the Board of
Patent Appeals and Interferences:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$160.00
By other than a small entity--$320.00
(c) In addition to the fee for filing a notice of appeal, for filing
a brief in support of an appeal:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$160.00
By other than a small entity--$320.00
(d) For filing a request for an oral hearing before the Board of
Patent Appeals and Interferences in an appeal under 35 U.S.C. 134:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$140.00
By other than a small entity--$280.00
(e) To request continued examination pursuant to Sec. 1.114:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$370.00
By other than a small entity--$740.00
(f)-(g) [Reserved]
(h) For filing a petition to the Commissioner under one of $130.00
the following sections which refers to this paragraph.....
Sec. 1.12--for access to an assignment record
Sec. 1.14--for access to an application
Sec. 1.47--for filing by other than all the inventors
or a person not the inventor
Sec. 1.53(e)--to accord a filing date
Sec. 1.59--for expungement and return of information
Sec. 1.84--for accepting color drawings or photographs
Sec. 1.91--for entry of a model or exhibit
Sec. 1.102--to make an application special
Sec. 1.103(a)--to suspend action in an application
Sec. 1.138(c)--to expressly abandon an application to
avoid publication
Sec. 1.182--for decision on a question not
specifically provided for
Sec. 1.183--to suspend the rules
Sec. 1.295--for review of refusal to publish a
statutory invention registration
Sec. 1.313--to withdraw an application from issue
Sec. 1.314--to defer issuance of a patent
[[Page 27]]
Sec. 1.377--for review of decision refusing to accept
and record payment of a maintenance fee filed prior to
expiration of a patent
Sec. 1.378(e)--for reconsideration of decision on
petition refusing to accept delayed payment of
maintenance fee in an expired patent
Sec. 1.644(e)--for petition in an interference
Sec. 1.644(f)--for request for reconsideration of a
decision on petition in an interference
Sec. 1.666(b)--for access to an interference
settlement agreement
Sec. 1.666(c)--for late filing of an interference
settlement agreement
Sec. 1.741(b)--to accord a filing date to an
application under Sec. 1.740 for extension of a
patent term
Sec. 5.12--for expedited handling of a foreign filing
license
Sec. 5.15--for changing the scope of a license
Sec. 5.25--for a retroactive license
Sec. 104.3--for waiver of a rule in Part 104 of this
title
(h) For filing a petition under one of the following sections which
refers to this paragraph: $130.00.
Sec. 1.12--for access to an assignment record.
Sec. 1.14--for access to an application.
Sec. 1.47--for filing by other than all the inventors or a person not
the inventor.
Sec. 1.53(e)--to accord a filing date.
Sec. 1.59--for expungement and return of information.
Sec. 1.84--for accepting color drawings or photographs.
Sec. 1.91--for entry of a model or exhibit.
Sec. 1.102--to make an application special.
Sec. 1.103(a)--to suspend action in an application.
Sec. 1.138(c)--to expressly abandon an application to avoid publication.
Sec. 1.182--for decision on a question not specifically provided for.
Sec. 1.183--to suspend the rules.
Sec. 1.295--for review of refusal to publish a statutory invention
registration.
Sec. 1.313--to withdraw an application from issue.
Sec. 1.314--to defer issuance of a patent.
Sec. 1.377--for review of decision refusing to accept and record payment
of a maintenance fee filed prior to expiration of a patent.
Sec. 1.378(e)--for reconsideration of decision on petition refusing to
accept delayed payment of maintenance fee in an expired patent.
Sec. 1.644(e)--for petition in an interference.
Sec. 1.644(f)--for request for reconsideration of a decision on petition
in an interference.
Sec. 1.666(b)--for access to an interference settlement agreement.
Sec. 1.666(c)--for late filing of interference settlement agreement.
Sec. 1.741(b)--to accord a filing date to an application under
Sec. 1.740 for extension of a patent term.
Sec. 5.12--for expedited handling of a foreign filing license.
Sec. 5.15--for changing the scope of a license.
Sec. 5.25--for retroactive license.
(i) Processing fee for taking action under one of the following
sections which refers to this paragraph: $130.00.
Sec. 1.28(c)(3)--for processing a non-itemized fee deficiency based on
an error in small entity status.
Sec. 1.41--for supplying the name or names of the inventor or inventors
after the filing date without an oath or declaration as prescribed by
Sec. 1.63, except in provisional applications.
Sec. 1.48--for correcting inventorship, except in provisional
applications.
Sec. 1.52(d)--for processing a nonprovisional application filed with a
specification in a language other than English.
Sec. 1.53(b)(3)--to convert a provisional application filed under
Sec. 1.53(c) into a nonprovisional application under Sec. 1.53(b).
Sec. 1.55--for entry of late priority papers.
Sec. 1.99(e)--for processing a belated submission under Sec. 1.99.
Sec. 1.103(b)--for requesting limited suspension of action, continued
prosecution application (Sec. 1.53(d)).
Sec. 1.103(c)--for requesting limited suspension of action, request for
continued examination (Sec. 1.114).
Sec. 1.103(d)--for requesting deferred examination of an application.
Sec. 1.217--for processing a redacted copy of a paper submitted in the
file of an application in which a redacted copy was submitted for the
patent application publication.
Sec. 1.221--for requesting voluntary publication or republication of an
application.
Sec. 1.497(d)--for filing an oath or declaration pursuant to 35 U.S.C.
371(c)(4) naming an inventive entity different from the inventive entity
set forth in the international stage.
Sec. 3.81--for a patent to issue to assignee, assignment submitted after
payment of the issue fee.
[[Page 28]]
(j) For filing a petition to institute a public use proceeding under
Sec. 1.292--$1,510.00.
(k) For filing a request for expedited examination under
Sec. 1.155(a)--$900.00.
(l) For filing a petition for the revival of an unavoidably
abandoned application under 35 U.S.C. 111, 133, 364, or 371, for the
unavoidably delayed payment of the issue fee under 35 U.S.C. 151, or for
the revival of an unavoidably terminated reexamination proceeding under
35 U.S.C. 133 (Sec. 1.137(a)):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a)): $55.00.
By other than a small entity: $110.00.
(m) For filing a petition for revival of an unintentionally
abandoned application, for the unintentionally delayed payment of the
fee for issuing a patent, or for the revival of an unintentionally
terminated reexamination proceeding under 35 U.S.C. 41(a)(7)
(Sec. 1.137(b)):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$640.00
By other than a small entity--$1,280.00
(n) For requesting publication of a statutory invention registration
prior to the mailing of the first examiner's action pursuant to
Sec. 1.104--$920.00 reduced by the amount of the application basic
filing fee paid.
(o) For requesting publication of a statutory invention registration
after the mailing of the first examiner's action pursuant to Sec. 1.104-
-$1,840.00 reduced by the amount of the application basic filing fee
paid.
(p) For an information disclosure statement under Sec. 1.97(c) or
(d) or a submission under Sec. 1.99: $180.00.
(q) Processing fee for taking action under one of the following
sections which refers to this paragraph--$50.00
Sec. 1.41--to supply the name or names of the inventor or inventors
after the filing date without a cover sheet as prescribed by
Sec. 1.51(c)(1) in a provisional application.
Sec. 1.48--for correction of inventorship in a provisional application.
Sec. 1.53(c)(2)--to convert a nonprovisional application filed under
Sec. 1.53(b) to a provisional application under Sec. 1.53(c).
(r) For entry of a submission after final rejection under
Sec. 1.129(a):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$370.00
By other than a small entity--$740.00
(s) For each additional invention requested to be examined under
Sec. 1.129(b):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$370.00
By other than a small entity--$740.00
(t) For the acceptance of an unintentionally delayed claim for
priority under 35 U.S.C. 119, 120, 121, or 365(a) or (c) (Secs. 1.55 and
1.78)--$1,280.00
[56 FR 65152, Dec. 13, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 2033, Jan 17, 1992; 57
FR 32439, July 22, 1992; 58 FR 38723, July 20, 1993; 58 FR 45841, Aug.
31, 1993; 60 FR 20221, Apr. 25, 1995; 62 FR 40452, July 29, 1997; 62 FR
53182, Oct. 10, 1997; 62 FR 61235, Nov. 17, 1997; 63 FR 67580, Dec. 8,
1998; 64 FR 67777, Dec. 3, 1999; 65 FR 14871, Mar. 20, 2000; 65 FR
49195, Aug. 11, 2000; 65 FR 54658, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57052, Sept. 20,
2000; 65 FR 78959, Dec. 18, 2000; 66 FR 47389, Sept. 12, 2001; 66 FR
39449, July 31, 2001]
Sec. 1.18 Patent post allowance (including issue) fees.
(a) Issue fee for issuing each original or reissue patent, except a
design or plant patent:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$640.00
By other than a small entity--$1,280.00
(b) Issue fee for issuing a design patent:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$230.00
By other than a small entity--$460.00
(c) Issue fee for issuing a plant patent:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$310.00
By other than a small entity--$620.00
(d)
Publication fee............................................ $300.00.
(e) For filing an application for patent term adjustment under
Sec. 1.705: $200.00.
(f) For filing a request for reinstatement of all or part of the
term reduced pursuant to Sec. 1.704(b) in an application for patent term
adjustment under Sec. 1.705: $400.00.
[65 FR 49195, Aug. 11, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 56391, Sept. 18, 2000;
65 FR 57053, Sept. 20, 2000; 65 FR 78960, Dec. 18, 2000; 66 FR 39449,
July 31, 2001]
Sec. 1.19 Document supply fees.
The United States Patent and Trademark Office will supply copies of
the following documents upon payment of the fees indicated. The copies
will be in black and white unless the original document is in color, a
color copy is requested and the fee for a color copy is paid.
[[Page 29]]
(a) Uncertified copies of patent application publications and
patents:
(1) Printed copy of the paper portion of a patent application
publication or patent, including a design patent, statutory invention
registration, or defensive publication document:
(i) Regular service, which includes preparation of copies $3.00.
by the Office within two to three business days and
delivery by United States Postal Service or to an Office
Box; and preparation of copies by the Office within one
business day of receipt and delivery by electronic means
(e.g., facsimile, electronic mail)........................
(ii) Next business day delivery to Office Box.............. $6.00.
(iii) Expedited delivery by commercial delivery service.... $25.00.
(2) Printed copy of a plant patent in color:............... $15.00.
(3) Color copy of a patent (other than a plant patent) or $25.00.
statutory invention registration containing a color
drawing...................................................
(b) Certified and uncertified copies of Office documents:
(1) Certified or uncertified copy of the paper portion of patent
application as filed:
(i) Regular service--$15.00
(ii) Expedited regular service--$30.00
(2) Certified or uncertified copy of paper portion of patent-related
file wrapper and contents:
(i) File wrapper and paper contents of 400 or fewer pages--$200.00
(ii) Additional fee for each additional 100 pages or portion
thereof--$40.00
(iii) Additional fee for certification--$25.00
(3) Certified or uncertified copy on compact disc of patent-related
file-wrapper contents that were submitted on compact disc:
(i) First compact disc in a single order--$55.00
(ii) Each additional compact disc in the single order of paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section--$15.00
(4) Certified or uncertified copy of Office records, per document
except as otherwise provided in this section--$25.00
(5) For assignment records, abstract of title and certification, per
patent--$25.00
(c) Library service (35 U.S.C. 13): For providing to libraries
copies of all patents issued annually, per annum--$50.00
(d) For list of all United States patents and statutory invention
registrations in a subclass--$3.00
(e) Uncertified statement as to status of the payment of maintenance
fees due on a patent or expiration of a patent--$10.00
(f) Uncertified copy of a non-United States patent document, per
document--$25.00
(g)-(h) [Reserved]
[56 FR 65152, Dec. 13, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 38195, Aug. 21, 1992;
58 FR 38723, July 20, 1993; 60 FR 41022, Aug. 11, 1995; 62 FR 40452,
July 29, 1997; 64 FR 67486, Dec. 2, 1999; 65 FR 54658, Sept. 8, 2000; 65
FR 57053, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.20 Post issuance fees.
(a) For providing a certificate of correction for applicant's
mistake:
(Sec. 1.323)--$100.00
(b) Processing fee for correcting inventorship in a patent
(Sec. 1.324)--$130.00.
(c) In reexamination proceedings
(1) For filing a request for ex parte reexamination (Sec. 1.510(a))-
-$2,520.00
(2) For filing a request for inter partes reexamination
(Sec. 1.915(a))--$8,800.00
(d) For filing each statutory disclaimer (Sec. 1.321):
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a)).......................... $55.00
By other than a small entity............................... $110.00
(e) For maintaining an original or reissue patent, except a design
or plant patent, based on an application filed on or after December 12,
1980, in force beyond four years; the fee is due by three years and six
months after the original grant:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$440.00
By other than a small entity--$880.00
(f) For maintaining an original or reissue patent, except a design
or plant patent, based on an application filed on
[[Page 30]]
or after December 12, 1980, in force beyond eight years; the fee is due
by seven years and six months after the original grant:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$1,010.00
By other than a small entity--$2,020.00
(g) For maintaining an original or reissue patent, except a design
or plant patent, based on an application filed on or after December 12,
1980, in force beyond twelve years; the fee is due by eleven years and
six months after the original grant:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a))--$1,550.00
By other than a small entity--$3,100.00
(h) Surcharge for paying a maintenance fee during the six-month
grace period following the expiration of three years and six months,
seven years and six months and eleven years and six months after the
date of the original grant of a patent based on an application filed on
or after December 12, 1980:
By a small entity (Sec. 1.27(a)).......................... $65.00
By other than a small entity............................... $130.00
(i) Surcharge for accepting a maintenance fee after expiration of a
patent for non-timely payment of a maintenance fee where the delay in
payment is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioner to have been--
(1) Unavoidable--$700.00
(2) Unintentional--$1,640.00
(j) For filing an application for extension of the term of a patent
(Sec. 1.740)--$1,060.00
(1) Application for extension under Sec. 1.740--$1,120.00
(2) Initial application for interim extension under Sec. 1.790--
$420.00
(3) Subsequent application for interim extension under Sec. 1.790--
$220.00
[56 FR 65153, Dec. 13, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 38195, Aug. 21, 1992;
57 FR 56450, Nov. 30, 1992; 58 FR 44280, Aug. 20, 1993; 60 FR 41022,
Aug. 11, 1995; 61 FR 39588, July 30, 1996; 62 FR 40453, July 29, 1997;
63 FR 67580, Dec. 8, 1998; 64 FR 67777, Dec. 3, 1999; 65 FR 76772, Dec.
7, 2000; 65 FR 78960, Dec. 18, 2000; 65 FR 80755, Dec. 22, 2000; 66 FR
39449, July 31, 2001]
Sec. 1.21 Miscellaneous fees and charges.
The Patent and Trademark Office has established the following fees
for the services indicated:
(a) Registration of attorneys and agents:
(1) For admission to examination for registration to practice:
(i) Application Fee (non-refundable)--$40.00
(ii) Registration examination fee--$310.00
(2) On registration to practice--$100.00
(3) For reinstatement to practice--$40.00
(4) For certificate of good standing as an attorney or agent--$10.00
Suitable for framing--$20.00
(5) For review of a decision of the Director of Enrollment and
Discipline under Sec. 10.2(c)--$130.00
(6) For requesting regrading of an examination under Sec. 10.7(c):
(i) Regrading of seven or fewer questions--$230.00
(ii) Regrading of eight or more questions--$460.00
(b) Deposit accounts:
(1) For establishing a deposit account--$10.00
(2) Service charge for each month when the balance at the end of the
month is below $1,000--$25.00
(3) Service charge for each month when the balance at the end of the
month is below $300 for restricted subscription deposit accounts used
exclusively for subscription order of patent copies as issued--$25.00
(c) Disclosure document: For filing a disclosure document--$10.00
(d) Delivery box: Local delivery box rental, per annum--$50.00
(e) International type search reports: For preparing an
international type search report of an international type search made at
the time of the first action on the merits in a national patent
application--$40.00
(f) [Reserved]
(g) Self-service copy charge, per page--$0.25
(h) For recording each assignment, agreement or other paper relating
to the property in a patent or application, per property--$40.00
(i) Publication in Official Gazette: For publication in the Official
Gazette of a notice of the availability of an application or a patent
for licensing or sale:
[[Page 31]]
Each application or patent--$25.00
(j) Labor charges for services, per hour or fraction thereof--$40.00
(k) For items and services that the Commissioner finds may be
supplied, for which fees are not specified by statute or by this part,
such charges as may be determined by the Commissioner with respect to
each such item or service--Actual Cost
(l) For processing and retaining any application abandoned pursuant
to Sec. 1.53(f), unless the required basic filing fee (Sec. 1.16)has
been paid--$130.00
(m) For processing each payment refused (including a check returned
``unpaid'') or charged back by a financial institution--$50.00.
(n) For handling an application in which proceedings are terminated
pursuant to Sec. 1.53(e)--$130.00
[56 FR 65153, Dec. 13, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 38195, Aug. 21, 1992;
57 FR 40493, Sept. 3, 1992; 59 FR 43741, Aug. 25, 1994; 60 FR 20222,
Apr. 25, 1995; 60 FR 41022, Aug. 11, 1995; 61 FR 39588, July 30, 1996;
61 FR 43400, Aug. 22, 1996; 62 FR 40453, July 29, 1997; 62 FR 53183,
Oct. 10, 1997; 63 FR 67580, Dec. 8, 1998; 65 FR 33455, May 24, 2000; 65
FR 49195, Aug. 11, 2000; 66 FR 39450, July 31, 2001]
Sec. 1.22 Fees payable in advance.
(a) Patent and trademark fees and charges payable to the Patent and
Trademark Office are required to be paid in advance, that is, at the
time of requesting any action by the Office for which a fee or charge is
payable with the exception that under Sec. 1.53 applications for patent
may be assigned a filing date without payment of the basic filing fee.
(b) All fees paid to the United States Patent and Trademark Office
must be itemized in each individual application, patent, trademark
registration file, or other proceeding in such a manner that it is clear
for which purpose the fees are paid. The Office may return fees that are
not itemized as required by this paragraph. The provisions of
Sec. 1.5(a) do not apply to the resubmission of fees returned pursuant
to this paragraph.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2708, Jan. 20, 1983, as amended at 65 FR 54659, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.23 Methods of payment.
(a) All payments of money required for United States Patent and
Trademark Office fees, including fees for the processing of
international applications (Sec. 1.445), shall be made in U.S. dollars
and in the form of a cashier's or certified check, Treasury note,
national bank notes, or United States Postal Service money order. If
sent in any other form, the Office may delay or cancel the credit until
collection is made. Checks and money orders must be made payable to the
Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office. (Checks made
payable to the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks will continue to
be accepted.) Payments from foreign countries must be payable and
immediately negotiable in the United States for the full amount of the
fee required. Money sent to the Office by mail will be at the risk of
the sender, and letters containing money should be registered with the
United States Postal Service.
(b) Payments of money required for United States Patent and
Trademark Office fees may also be made by credit card. Payment of a fee
by credit card must specify the amount to be charged to the credit card
and such other information as is necessary to process the charge, and is
subject to collection of the fee. The Office will not accept a general
authorization to charge fees to a credit card. If credit card
information is provided on a form or document other than a form provided
by the Office for the payment of fees by credit card, the Office will
not be liable if the credit card number becomes public knowledge.
[65 FR 33455, May 24, 2000]
Sec. 1.24 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.25 Deposit accounts.
(a) For the convenience of attorneys, and the general public in
paying any fees due, in ordering services offered by the Office, copies
of records, etc., deposit accounts may be established in the Patent and
Trademark Office upon payment of the fee for establishing a deposit
account (Sec. 1.21(b)(1)). A minimum deposit of $1,000 is required for
paying any fees due or in ordering any
[[Page 32]]
services offered by the Office. However, a minimum deposit of $300 may
be paid to establish a restricted subscription deposit account used
exclusively for subscription order of patent copies as issued. At the
end of each month, a deposit account statement will be rendered. A
remittance must be made promptly upon receipt of the statement to cover
the value of items or services charged to the account and thus restore
the account to its established normal deposit. An amount sufficient to
cover all fees, services, copies, etc., requested must always be on
deposit. Charges to accounts with insufficient funds will not be
accepted. A service charge (Sec. 1.21(b)(2)) will be assessed for each
month that the balance at the end of the month is below $1,000. For
restricted subscription deposit accounts, a service charge
(Sec. 1.21(b)(3)) will be assessed for each month that the balance at
the end of the month is below $300.
(b) Filing, issue, appeal, international-type search report,
international application processing, petition, and post-issuance fees
may be charged against these accounts if sufficient funds are on deposit
to cover such fees. A general authorization to charge all fees, or only
certain fees, set forth in Secs. 1.16 to 1.18 to a deposit account
containing sufficient funds may be filed in an individual application,
either for the entire pendency of the application or with a particular
paper filed. An authorization to charge fees under Sec. 1.16 in an
international application entering the national stage under 35 U.S.C.
371 will be treated as an authorization to charge fees under Sec. 1.492.
An authorization to charge fees set forth in Sec. 1.18 to a deposit
account is subject to the provisions of Sec. 1.311(b). An authorization
to charge to a deposit account the fee for a request for reexamination
pursuant to Sec. 1.510 or Sec. 1.913 and any other fees required in a
reexamination proceeding in a patent may also be filed with the request
for reexamination. An authorization to charge a fee to a deposit account
will not be considered payment of the fee on the date the authorization
to charge the fee is effective as to the particular fee to be charged
unless sufficient funds are present in the account to cover the fee.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[49 FR 553, Jan. 4, 1984, as amended at 50 FR 31826, Aug. 6, 1985; 65 FR
76772, Dec. 7, 2000; 67 FR 523, Jan. 4, 2002]
Sec. 1.26 Refunds.
(a) The Commissioner may refund any fee paid by mistake or in excess
of that required. A change of purpose after the payment of a fee, such
as when a party desires to withdraw a patent or trademark filing for
which the fee was paid, including an application, an appeal, or a
request for an oral hearing, will not entitle a party to a refund of
such fee. The Office will not refund amounts of twenty-five dollars or
less unless a refund is specifically requested, and will not notify the
payor of such amounts. If a party paying a fee or requesting a refund
does not provide the banking information necessary for making refunds by
electronic funds transfer (31 U.S.C. 3332 and 31 CFR part 208), or
instruct the Office that refunds are to be credited to a deposit
account, the Commissioner may require such information, or use the
banking information on the payment instrument to make a refund. Any
refund of a fee paid by credit card will be by a credit to the credit
card account to which the fee was charged.
(b) Any request for refund must be filed within two years from the
date the fee was paid, except as otherwise provided in this paragraph or
in Sec. 1.28(a). If the Office charges a deposit account by an amount
other than an amount specifically indicated in an authorization
(Sec. 1.25(b)), any request for refund based upon such charge must be
filed within two years from the date of the deposit account statement
indicating such charge, and include a copy of that deposit account
statement. The time periods set forth in this paragraph are not
extendable.
(c) If the Commissioner decides not to institute a reexamination
proceeding, for ex parte reexaminations filed under Sec. 1.510, a refund
of $1,690 will be made to the reexamination requester. For inter partes
reexaminations filed under Sec. 1.913, a refund of
[[Page 33]]
$7,970 will be made to the reexamination requester. The reexamination
requester should indicate the form in which any refund should be made
(e.g., by check, electronic funds transfer, credit to a deposit account,
etc.). Generally, reexamination refunds will be issued in the form that
the original payment was provided.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[47 FR 41274, Sept. 17, 1982, as amended at 50 FR 31826, Aug. 6, 1985;
54 FR 6902, Feb. 15, 1989; 56 FR 65153, Dec. 13, 1991; 57 FR 38195, Aug.
21, 1992; 62 FR 53183, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 54659, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR
76773, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.27 Definition of small entities and establishing status as a small
entity to permit payment of small entity fees; when a determination of
entitlement to
small entity status and notification of loss of entitlement to
small entity status are required; fraud on the Office.
(a) Definition of small entities. A small entity as used in this
chapter means any party (person, small business concern, or nonprofit
organization) under paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(3) of this section.
(1) Person. A person, as used in paragraph (c) of this section,
means any inventor or other individual (e.g., an individual to whom an
inventor has transferred some rights in the invention), who has not
assigned, granted, conveyed, or licensed, and is under no obligation
under contract or law to assign, grant, convey, or license, any rights
in the invention. An inventor or other individual who has transferred
some rights, or is under an obligation to transfer some rights in the
invention to one or more parties, can also qualify for small entity
status if all the parties who have had rights in the invention
transferred to them also qualify for small entity status either as a
person, small business concern, or nonprofit organization under this
section.
(2) Small business concern. A small business concern, as used in
paragraph (c) of this section, means any business concern that:
(i) Has not assigned, granted, conveyed, or licensed, and is under
no obligation under contract or law to assign, grant, convey, or
license, any rights in the invention to any person, concern, or
organization which would not qualify for small entity status as a
person, small business concern, or nonprofit organization.
(ii) Meets the standards set forth in 13 CFR part 121 to be eligible
for reduced patent fees. Questions related to standards for a small
business concern may be directed to: Small Business Administration, Size
Standards Staff, 409 Third Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20416.
(3) Nonprofit Organization. A nonprofit organization, as used in
paragraph (c) of this section, means any nonprofit organization that:
(i) Has not assigned, granted, conveyed, or licensed, and is under
no obligation under contract or law to assign, grant, convey, or
license, any rights in the invention to any person, concern, or
organization which would not qualify as a person, small business
concern, or a nonprofit organization, and
(ii) Is either:
(A) A university or other institution of higher education located in
any country;
(B) An organization of the type described in section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3)) and exempt from
taxation under section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.
501(a));
(C) Any nonprofit scientific or educational organization qualified
under a nonprofit organization statute of a state of this country (35
U.S.C. 201(i)); or
(D) Any nonprofit organization located in a foreign country which
would qualify as a nonprofit organization under paragraphs (a)(3)(ii)(B)
of this section or (a)(3)(ii)(C) of this section if it were located in
this country.
(4) License to a Federal agency. (i) For persons under paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, a license to the Government resulting from a
rights determination under Executive Order 10096 does not constitute a
license so as to prohibit claiming small entity status.
(ii) For small business concerns and nonprofit organizations under
paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this section, a license to a Federal
agency resulting from a funding agreement with that agency pursuant to
35 U.S.C. 202(c)(4) does not constitute a license for the
[[Page 34]]
purposes of paragraphs (a)(2)(i) and (a)(3)(i) of this section.
(b) Establishment of small entity status permits payment of reduced
fees. A small entity, as defined in paragraph (a) of this section, who
has properly asserted entitlement to small entity status pursuant to
paragraph (c) of this section will be accorded small entity status by
the Office in the particular application or patent in which entitlement
to small entity status was asserted. Establishment of small entity
status allows the payment of certain reduced patent fees pursuant to 35
U.S.C. 41(h).
(c) Assertion of small entity status. Any party (person, small
business concern or nonprofit organization) should make a determination,
pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section, of entitlement to be accorded
small entity status based on the definitions set forth in paragraph (a)
of this section, and must, in order to establish small entity status for
the purpose of paying small entity fees, actually make an assertion of
entitlement to small entity status, in the manner set forth in
paragraphs (c)(1) or (c)(3) of this section, in the application or
patent in which such small entity fees are to be paid.
(1) Assertion by writing. Small entity status may be established by
a written assertion of entitlement to small entity status. A written
assertion must:
(i) Be clearly identifiable;
(ii) Be signed (see paragraph (c)(2) of this section); and
(iii) Convey the concept of entitlement to small entity status, such
as by stating that applicant is a small entity, or that small entity
status is entitled to be asserted for the application or patent. While
no specific words or wording are required to assert small entity status,
the intent to assert small entity status must be clearly indicated in
order to comply with the assertion requirement.
(2) Parties who can sign and file the written assertion. The written
assertion can be signed by:
(i) One of the parties identified in Sec. 1.33(b) (e.g., an attorney
or agent registered with the Office), Sec. 3.73(b) of this chapter
notwithstanding, who can also file the written assertion;
(ii) At least one of the individuals identified as an inventor (even
though a Sec. 1.63 executed oath or declaration has not been submitted),
notwithstanding Sec. 1.33(b)(4), who can also file the written assertion
pursuant to the exception under Sec. 1.33(b) of this part; or
(iii) An assignee of an undivided part interest, notwithstanding
Secs. 1.33(b)(3) and 3.73(b) of this chapter, but the partial assignee
cannot file the assertion without resort to a party identified under
Sec. 1.33(b) of this part.
(3) Assertion by payment of the small entity basic filing or basic
national fee. The payment, by any party, of the exact amount of one of
the small entity basic filing fees set forth in Secs. 1.16(a), (f), (g),
(h), or (k), or one of the small entity basic national fees set forth in
Secs. 1.492(a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), or (a)(5), will be treated as
a written assertion of entitlement to small entity status even if the
type of basic filing or basic national fee is inadvertently selected in
error.
(i) If the Office accords small entity status based on payment of a
small entity basic filing or basic national fee under paragraph (c)(3)
of this section that is not applicable to that application, any balance
of the small entity fee that is applicable to that application will be
due along with the appropriate surcharge set forth in Sec. 1.16(e), or
Sec. 1.16(l).
(ii) The payment of any small entity fee other than those set forth
in paragraph (c)(3) of this section (whether in the exact fee amount or
not) will not be treated as a written assertion of entitlement to small
entity status and will not be sufficient to establish small entity
status in an application or a patent.
(4) Assertion required in related, continuing, and reissue
applications. Status as a small entity must be specifically established
by an assertion in each related, continuing and reissue application in
which status is appropriate and desired. Status as a small entity in one
application or patent does not affect the status of any other
application or patent, regardless of the relationship of the
applications or patents. The refiling of an application under Sec. 1.53
as a continuation, divisional, or continuation-in-part application
(including a continued prosecution application under Sec. 1.53(d)), or
the filing of a reissue
[[Page 35]]
application, requires a new assertion as to continued entitlement to
small entity status for the continuing or reissue application.
(d) When small entity fees can be paid. Any fee, other than the
small entity basic filing fees and the small entity national fees of
paragraph (c)(3) of this section, can be paid in the small entity amount
only if it is submitted with, or subsequent to, the submission of a
written assertion of entitlement to small entity status, except when
refunds are permitted by Sec. 1.28(a).
(e) Only one assertion required. (1) An assertion of small entity
status need only be filed once in an application or patent. Small entity
status, once established, remains in effect until changed pursuant to
paragraph (g)(1) of this section. Where an assignment of rights or an
obligation to assign rights to other parties who are small entities
occurs subsequent to an assertion of small entity status, a second
assertion is not required.
(2) Once small entity status is withdrawn pursuant to paragraph
(g)(2) of this section, a new written assertion is required to again
obtain small entity status.
(f) Assertion requires a determination of entitlement to pay small
entity fees. Prior to submitting an assertion of entitlement to small
entity status in an application, including a related, continuing, or
reissue application, a determination of such entitlement should be made
pursuant to the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section. It should
be determined that all parties holding rights in the invention qualify
for small entity status. The Office will generally not question any
assertion of small entity status that is made in accordance with the
requirements of this section, but note paragraph (h) of this section.
(g)(1) New determination of entitlement to small entity status is
needed when issue and maintenance fees are due. Once status as a small
entity has been established in an application or patent, fees as a small
entity may thereafter be paid in that application or patent without
regard to a change in status until the issue fee is due or any
maintenance fee is due.
(2) Notification of loss of entitlement to small entity status is
required when issue and maintenance fees are due. Notification of a loss
of entitlement to small entity status must be filed in the application
or patent prior to paying, or at the time of paying, the earliest of the
issue fee or any maintenance fee due after the date on which status as a
small entity as defined in paragraph (a) of this section is no longer
appropriate. The notification that small entity status is no longer
appropriate must be signed by a party identified in Sec. 1.33(b).
Payment of a fee in other than the small entity amount is not sufficient
notification that small entity status is no longer appropriate.
(h) Fraud attempted or practiced on the Office.
(1) Any attempt to fraudulently establish status as a small entity,
or pay fees as a small entity, shall be considered as a fraud practiced
or attempted on the Office.
(2) Improperly, and with intent to deceive, establishing status as a
small entity, or paying fees as a small entity, shall be considered as a
fraud practiced or attempted on the Office.
[65 FR 54659, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.28 Refunds when small entity status is later established; how errors in small entity status are excused.
(a) Refunds based on later establishment of small entity status. A
refund pursuant to Sec. 1.26, based on establishment of small entity
status, of a portion of fees timely paid in full prior to establishing
status as a small entity may only be obtained if an assertion under
Sec. 1.27(c) and a request for a refund of the excess amount are filed
within three months of the date of the timely payment of the full fee.
The three-month time period is not extendable under Sec. 1.136. Status
as a small entity is waived for any fee by the failure to establish the
status prior to paying, at the time of paying, or within three months of
the date of payment of, the full fee.
(b) Date of payment. (1) The three-month period for requesting a
refund, pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section, starts on the date
that a full fee has been paid;
[[Page 36]]
(2) The date when a deficiency payment is paid in full determines
the amount of deficiency that is due, pursuant to paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) How errors in small entity status are excused. If status as a
small entity is established in good faith, and fees as a small entity
are paid in good faith, in any application or patent, and it is later
discovered that such status as a small entity was established in error,
or that through error the Office was not notified of a loss of
entitlement to small entity status as required by Sec. 1.27(g)(2), the
error will be excused upon: compliance with the separate submission and
itemization requirements of paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this
section, and the deficiency payment requirement of paragraph (c)(2) of
this section:
(1) Separate submission required for each application or patent. Any
paper submitted under this paragraph must be limited to the deficiency
payment (all fees paid in error), required by paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, for one application or one patent. Where more than one
application or patent is involved, separate submissions of deficiency
payments (e.g., checks) and itemizations are required for each
application or patent. See Sec. 1.4(b).
(2) Payment of deficiency owed. The deficiency owed, resulting from
the previous erroneous payment of small entity fees, must be paid.
(i) Calculation of the deficiency owed. The deficiency owed for each
previous fee erroneously paid as a small entity is the difference
between the current fee amount (for other than a small entity) on the
date the deficiency is paid in full and the amount of the previous
erroneous (small entity) fee payment. The total deficiency payment owed
is the sum of the individual deficiency owed amounts for each fee amount
previously erroneously paid as a small entity. Where a fee paid in error
as a small entity was subject to a fee decrease between the time the fee
was paid in error and the time the deficiency is paid in full, the
deficiency owed is equal to the amount (previously) paid in error;
(ii) Itemization of the deficiency payment. An itemization of the
total deficiency payment is required. The itemization must include the
following information:
(A) Each particular type of fee that was erroneously paid as a small
entity, (e.g., basic statutory filing fee, two-month extension of time
fee) along with the current fee amount for a non-small entity;
(B) The small entity fee actually paid, and when. This will permit
the Office to differentiate, for example, between two one-month
extension of time fees erroneously paid as a small entity but on
different dates;
(C) The deficiency owed amount (for each fee erroneously paid); and
(D) The total deficiency payment owed, which is the sum or total of
the individual deficiency owed amounts set forth in paragraph
(c)(2)(ii)(C) of this section.
(3) Failure to comply with requirements. If the requirements of
paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section are not complied with, such
failure will either: be treated as an authorization for the Office to
process the deficiency payment and charge the processing fee set forth
in Sec. 1.17(i), or result in a requirement for compliance within a one-
month non-extendable time period under Sec. 1.136(a) to avoid the return
of the fee deficiency paper, at the option of the Office.
(d) Payment of deficiency operates as notification of loss of
status. Any deficiency payment (based on a previous erroneous payment of
a small entity fee) submitted under paragraph (c) of this section will
be treated under Sec. 1.27(g)(2) as a notification of a loss of
entitlement to small entity status.
[65 FR 54661, Sept. 8, 2000]
Subpart B--National Processing Provisions
Prosecution of Application and Appointment of Attorney or Agent
Sec. 1.31 Applicants may be represented by a registered attorney or agent.
An applicant for patent may file and prosecute his or her own case,
or he or she may be represented by a registered attorney, registered
agent, or other individual authorized to practice before the Patent and
Trademark Office in patent cases. See Secs. 10.6 and 10.9 of this
[[Page 37]]
subchapter. The Patent and Trademark Office cannot aid in the selection
of a registered attorney or agent.
[50 FR 5171, Feb. 6, 1985]
Sec. 1.32 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.33 Correspondence respecting patent applications, reexamination proceedings, and other proceedings.
(a) Correspondence address and daytime telephone number. When filing
an application, a correspondence address must be set forth in either an
application data sheet (Sec. 1.76), or elsewhere, in a clearly
identifiable manner, in any paper submitted with an application filing.
If no correspondence address is specified, the Office may treat the
mailing address of the first named inventor (if provided, see
Secs. 1.76(b)(1) and 1.63(c)(2)) as the correspondence address. The
Office will direct all notices, official letters, and other
communications relating to the application to the correspondence
address. The Office will not engage in double correspondence with an
applicant and a registered attorney or agent, or with more than one
registered attorney or agent except as deemed necessary by the
Commissioner. If more than one correspondence address is specified, the
Office will establish one as the correspondence address. For the party
to whom correspondence is to be addressed, a daytime telephone number
should be supplied in a clearly identifiable manner and may be changed
by any party who may change the correspondence address. The
correspondence address may be changed as follows:
(1) Prior to filing of a Sec. 1.63 oath or declaration by any of the
inventors. If a Sec. 1.63 oath or declaration has not been filed by any
of the inventors, the correspondence address may be changed by the party
who filed the application. If the application was filed by a registered
attorney or agent, any other registered practitioner named in the
transmittal papers may also change the correspondence address. Thus, the
inventor(s), any registered practitioner named in the transmittal papers
accompanying the original application, or a party that will be the
assignee who filed the application, may change the correspondence
address in that application under this paragraph.
(2) Where a Sec. 1.63 oath or declaration has been filed by any of
the inventors. If a Sec. 1.63 oath or declaration has been filed, or is
filed concurrent with the filing of an application, by any of the
inventors, the correspondence address may be changed by the parties set
forth in paragraph (b) of this section, except for paragraph (b)(2).
(b) Amendments and other papers. Amendments and other papers, except
for written assertions pursuant to Sec. 1.27(c)(2)(ii) of this part,
filed in the application must be signed by:
(1) A registered attorney or agent of record appointed in compliance
with Sec. 1.34(b);
(2) A registered attorney or agent not of record who acts in a
representative capacity under the provisions of Sec. 1.34(a);
(3) An assignee as provided for under Sec. 3.71(b) of this chapter;
or
(4) All of the applicants (Sec. 1.41(b)) for patent, unless there is
an assignee of the entire interest and such assignee has taken action in
the application in accordance with Sec. 3.71 of this chapter.
(c) All notices, official letters, and other communications for the
patent owner or owners in a reexamination proceeding will be directed to
the attorney or agent of record (see Sec. 1.34(b)) in the patent file at
the address listed on the register of patent attorneys and agents
maintained pursuant to Secs. 10.5 and 10.11 or, if no attorney or agent
is of record, to the patent owner or owners at the address or addresses
of record. Amendments and other papers filed in a reexamination
proceeding on behalf of the patent owner must be signed by the patent
owner, or if there is more than one owner by all the owners, or by an
attorney or agent of record in the patent file, or by a registered
attorney or agent not of record who acts in a representative capacity
under the provisions of Sec. 1.34(a). Double correspondence with the
patent owner or owners and the patent owner's attorney or agent, or with
more than one attorney or agent, will not be undertaken. If more than
one attorney or agent is of record and a correspondence
[[Page 38]]
address has not been specified, correspondence will be held with the
last attorney or agent made of record.
(d) A ``correspondence address'' or change thereto may be filed with
the Patent and Trademark Office during the enforceable life of the
patent. The ``correspondence address'' will be used in any
correspondence relating to maintenance fees unless a separate ``fee
address'' has been specified. See Sec. 1.363 for ``fee address'' used
solely for maintenance fee purposes.
[36 FR 12617, July 2, 1971, as amended at 46 FR 29181, May 29, 1981; 49
FR 34724, Aug. 31, 1984; 50 FR 5171, Feb. 6, 1985; 62 FR 53184, Oct. 10,
1997; 65 FR 54661, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.34 Recognition for representation.
(a) When a registered attorney or agent acting in a representative
capacity, pursuant to Sec. 1.31, appears in person or signs a paper in
practice before the United States Patent and Trademark Office in a
patent case, his or her personal appearance or signature shall
constitute a representation to the United States Patent and Trademark
Office that under the provisions of this subchapter and the law, he or
she is authorized to represent the particular party in whose behalf he
or she acts. In filing such a paper, the registered attorney or agent
should specify his or her registration number with his or her signature.
Further proof of authority to act in a representative capacity may be
required.
(b) When a registered attorney or agent shall have filed his or her
power of attorney, or authorization, duly executed by the person or
persons entitled to prosecute an application or a patent involved in a
reexamination proceeding, pursuant to Sec. 1.31, he or she is a
principal registered attorney or agent of record in the case. A
principal registered attorney or agent, so appointed, may appoint an
associate registered attorney or agent who shall also then be of record.
[65 FR 54662, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.36 Revocation of power of attorney or authorization; withdrawal of registered attorney or agent.
A power of attorney or authorization of agent, pursuant to
Sec. 1.31, may be revoked at any stage in the proceedings of a case, and
a registered attorney or agent may withdraw, upon application to and
approval by the Commissioner. A registered attorney or agent, except an
associate registered attorney or agent whose address is the same as that
of the principal registered attorney or agent, will be notified of the
revocation of the power of attorney or authorization, and the applicant
or patent owner will be notified of the withdrawal of the registered
attorney or agent. An assignment will not of itself operate as a
revocation of a power or authorization previously given, but the
assignee of the entire interest may revoke previous powers and be
represented by a registered attorney or agent of the assignee's own
selection. See Sec. 1.613(d) for withdrawal in an interference.
[65 FR 54662, Sept. 8, 2000]
Who May Apply for a Patent
Sec. 1.41 Applicant for patent.
(a) A patent is applied for in the name or names of the actual
inventor or inventors.
(1) The inventorship of a nonprovisional application is that
inventorship set forth in the oath or declaration as prescribed by
Sec. 1.63, except as provided for in Secs. 1.53(d)(4) and 1.63(d). If an
oath or declaration as prescribed by Sec. 1.63 is not filed during the
pendency of a nonprovisional application, the inventorship is that
inventorship set forth in the application papers filed pursuant to
Sec. 1.53(b), unless applicant files a paper, including the processing
fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i), supplying or changing the name or names
of the inventor or inventors.
(2) The inventorship of a provisional application is that
inventorship set forth in the cover sheet as prescribed by
Sec. 1.51(c)(1). If a cover sheet as prescribed by Sec. 1.51(c)(1) is
not filed during the pendency of a provisional application, the
inventorship is that inventorship set forth in the application papers
filed pursuant to Sec. 1.53(c), unless applicant files a paper including
the processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(q), supplying or changing the
name or names of the inventor or inventors.
(3) In a nonprovisional application filed without an oath or
declaration as
[[Page 39]]
prescribed by Sec. 1.63 or a provisional application filed without a
cover sheet as prescribed by Sec. 1.51(c)(1), the name, residence, and
citizenship of each person believed to be an actual inventor should be
provided when the application papers pursuant to Sec. 1.53(b) or
Sec. 1.53(c) are filed.
(4) The inventorship of an international application entering the
national stage under 35 U.S.C. 371 is that inventorship set forth in the
international application, which includes any change effected under PCT
Rule 92bis. See Sec. 1.497(d) and (f) for filing an oath or declaration
naming an inventive entity different from the inventive entity named in
the international application, or if a change to the inventive entity
has been effected under PCT Rule 92bis subsequent to the execution of
any declaration filed under PCT Rule 4.17(iv) (Sec. 1.48(f)(1) does not
apply to an international application entering the national stage under
35 U.S.C. 371).
(b) Unless the contrary is indicated the word ``applicant'' when
used in these sections refers to the inventor or joint inventors who are
applying for a patent, or to the person mentioned in Secs. 1.42, 1.43,
or 1.47 who is applying for a patent in place of the inventor.
(c) Any person authorized by the applicant may physically or
electronically deliver an application for patent to the Office on behalf
of the inventor or inventors, but an oath or declaration for the
application (Sec. 1.63) can only be made in accordance with Sec. 1.64.
(d) A showing may be required from the person filing the application
that the filing was authorized where such authorization comes into
question.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2708, Jan. 20, 1983; 48 FR 4285, Jan. 31, 1983, as amended at 62
FR 53184, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 54662, Sept. 8, 2000; 67 FR 523, Jan. 4,
2002]
Sec. 1.42 When the inventor is dead.
In case of the death of the inventor, the legal representative
(executor, administrator, etc.) of the deceased inventor may make the
necessary oath or declaration, and apply for and obtain the patent.
Where the inventor dies during the time intervening between the filing
of the application and the granting of a patent thereon, the letters
patent may be issued to the legal representative upon proper
intervention.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2709, Jan. 20, 1983]
Sec. 1.43 When the inventor is insane or legally incapacitated.
In case an inventor is insane or otherwise legally incapacitated,
the legal representative (guardian, conservator, etc.) of such inventor
may make the necessary oath or declaration, and apply for and obtain the
patent.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2709, Jan. 20, 1983]
Sec. 1.44 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.45 Joint inventors.
(a) Joint inventors must apply for a patent jointly and each must
make the required oath or declaration: neither of them alone, nor less
than the entire number, can apply for a patent for an invention invented
by them jointly, except as provided in Sec. 1.47.
(b) Inventors may apply for a patent jointly even though
(1) They did not physically work together or at the same time,
(2) Each inventor did not make the same type or amount of
contribution, or
(3) Each inventor did not make a contribution to the subject matter
of every claim of the application.
(c) If multiple inventors are named in a nonprovisional application,
each named inventor must have made a contribution, individually or
jointly, to the subject matter of at least one claim of the application
and the application will be considered to be a joint application under
35 U.S.C. 116. If multiple inventors are named in a provisional
application, each named inventor must have made a contribution,
individually or jointly, to the subject
[[Page 40]]
matter disclosed in the provisional application and the provisional
application will be considered to be a joint application under 35 U.S.C.
116.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2709, Jan. 20, 1983, as amended at 50 FR 9379, Mar. 7, 1985; 60
FR 20222, Apr. 25, 1995]
Sec. 1.46 Assigned inventions and patents.
In case the whole or a part interest in the invention or in the
patent to be issued is assigned, the application must still be made or
authorized to be made, and an oath or declaration signed, by the
inventor or one of the persons mentioned in Sec. 1.42, 1.43, or 1.47.
However, the patent may be issued to the assignee or jointly to the
inventor and the assignee as provided in Sec. 3.81.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[57 FR 29642, July 6, 1992]
Sec. 1.47 Filing when an inventor refuses to sign or cannot be reached.
(a) If a joint inventor refuses to join in an application for patent
or cannot be found or reached after diligent effort, the application may
be made by the other inventor on behalf of himself or herself and the
nonsigning inventor. The oath or declaration in such an application must
be accompanied by a petition including proof of the pertinent facts, the
fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h), and the last known address of the
nonsigning inventor. The nonsigning inventor may subsequently join in
the application by filing an oath or declaration complying with
Sec. 1.63.
(b) Whenever all of the inventors refuse to execute an application
for patent, or cannot be found or reached after diligent effort, a
person to whom an inventor has assigned or agreed in writing to assign
the invention, or who otherwise shows sufficient proprietary interest in
the matter justifying such action, may make application for patent on
behalf of and as agent for all the inventors. The oath or declaration in
such an application must be accompanied by a petition including proof of
the pertinent facts, a showing that such action is necessary to preserve
the rights of the parties or to prevent irreparable damage, the fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(h), and the last known address of all of the
inventors. An inventor may subsequently join in the application by
filing an oath or declaration complying with Sec. 1.63.
(c) The Office will send notice of the filing of the application to
all inventors who have not joined in the application at the address(es)
provided in the petition under this section, and publish notice of the
filing of the application in the Official Gazette. The Office may
dispense with this notice provision in a continuation or divisional
application, if notice regarding the filing of the prior application was
given to the nonsigning inventor(s).
[65 FR 54662, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.48 Correction of inventorship in a patent application, other than a reissue application, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 116.
(a) Nonprovisional application after oath/declaration filed. If the
inventive entity is set forth in error in an executed Sec. 1.63 oath or
declaration in a nonprovisional application, and such error arose
without any deceptive intention on the part of the person named as an
inventor in error or on the part of the person who through error was not
named as an inventor, the inventorship of the nonprovisional application
may be amended to name only the actual inventor or inventors. If the
nonprovisional application is involved in an interference, the amendment
must comply with the requirements of this section and must be
accompanied by a motion under Sec. 1.634. Amendment of the inventorship
requires:
(1) A request to correct the inventorship that sets forth the
desired inventorship change;
(2) A statement from each person being added as an inventor and from
each person being deleted as an inventor that the error in inventorship
occurred without deceptive intention on his or her part;
(3) An oath or declaration by the actual inventor or inventors as
required by Sec. 1.63 or as permitted by Secs. 1.42, 1.43 or Sec. 1.47;
(4) The processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i); and
[[Page 41]]
(5) If an assignment has been executed by any of the original named
inventors, the written consent of the assignee (see Sec. 3.73(b) of this
chapter).
(b) Nonprovisional application--fewer inventors due to amendment or
cancellation of claims. If the correct inventors are named in a
nonprovisional application, and the prosecution of the nonprovisional
application results in the amendment or cancellation of claims so that
fewer than all of the currently named inventors are the actual inventors
of the invention being claimed in the nonprovisional application, an
amendment must be filed requesting deletion of the name or names of the
person or persons who are not inventors of the invention being claimed.
If the application is involved in an interference, the amendment must
comply with the requirements of this section and must be accompanied by
a motion under Sec. 1.634. Amendment of the inventorship requires:
(1) A request, signed by a party set forth in Sec. 1.33(b), to
correct the inventorship that identifies the named inventor or inventors
being deleted and acknowledges that the inventor's invention is no
longer being claimed in the nonprovisional application; and
(2) The processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i).
(c) Nonprovisional application--inventors added for claims to
previously unclaimed subject matter. If a nonprovisional application
discloses unclaimed subject matter by an inventor or inventors not named
in the application, the application may be amended to add claims to the
subject matter and name the correct inventors for the application. If
the application is involved in an interference, the amendment must
comply with the requirements of this section and must be accompanied by
a motion under Sec. 1.634. Amendment of the inventorship requires:
(1) A request to correct the inventorship that sets forth the
desired inventorship change;
(2) A statement from each person being added as an inventor that the
addition is necessitated by amendment of the claims and that the
inventorship error occurred without deceptive intention on his or her
part;
(3) An oath or declaration by the actual inventors as required by
Sec. 1.63 or as permitted by Secs. 1.42, 1.43, or Sec. 1.47;
(4) The processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i); and
(5) If an assignment has been executed by any of the original named
inventors, the written consent of the assignee (see Sec. 3.73(b) of this
chapter).
(d) Provisional application--adding omitted inventors. If the name
or names of an inventor or inventors were omitted in a provisional
application through error without any deceptive intention on the part of
the omitted inventor or inventors, the provisional application may be
amended to add the name or names of the omitted inventor or inventors.
Amendment of the inventorship requires:
(1) A request, signed by a party set forth in Sec. 1.33(b), to
correct the inventorship that identifies the inventor or inventors being
added and states that the inventorship error occurred without deceptive
intention on the part of the omitted inventor or inventors; and
(2) The processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(q).
(e) Provisional application--deleting the name or names of the
inventor or inventors. If a person or persons were named as an inventor
or inventors in a provisional application through error without any
deceptive intention on the part of such person or persons, an amendment
may be filed in the provisional application deleting the name or names
of the person or persons who were erroneously named. Amendment of the
inventorship requires:
(1) A request to correct the inventorship that sets forth the
desired inventorship change;
(2) A statement by the person or persons whose name or names are
being deleted that the inventorship error occurred without deceptive
intention on the part of such person or persons;
(3) The processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(q); and
(4) If an assignment has been executed by any of the original named
inventors, the written consent of the assignee (see Sec. 3.73(b) of this
chapter).
(f)(1) Nonprovisional application--filing executed oath/declaration
corrects inventorship. If the correct inventor or
[[Page 42]]
inventors are not named on filing a nonprovisional application under
Sec. 1.53(b) without an executed oath or declaration under Sec. 1.63 by
any of the inventors, the first submission of an executed oath or
declaration under Sec. 1.63 by any of the inventors during the pendency
of the application will act to correct the earlier identification of
inventorship. See Secs. 1.41(a)(4) and 1.497(d) and (f) for submission
of an executed oath or declaration to enter the national stage under 35
U.S.C. 371 naming an inventive entity different from the inventive
entity set forth in the international stage.
(2) Provisional application--filing cover sheet corrects
inventorship. If the correct inventor or inventors are not named on
filing a provisional application without a cover sheet under
Sec. 1.51(c)(1), the later submission of a cover sheet under
Sec. 1.51(c)(1) during the pendency of the application will act to
correct the earlier identification of inventorship.
(g) Additional information may be required. The Office may require
such other information as may be deemed appropriate under the particular
circumstances surrounding the correction of inventorship.
(h) Reissue applications not covered. The provisions of this section
do not apply to reissue applications. See Secs. 1.171 and 1.175 for
correction of inventorship in a patent via a reissue application.
(i) Correction of inventorship in patent or interference. See
Sec. 1.324 for correction of inventorship in a patent, and Sec. 1.634
for correction of inventorship in an interference.
[65 FR 54663, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 67 FR 523, Jan. 4, 2002]
The Application
Sec. 1.51 General requisites of an application.
(a) Applications for patents must be made to the Commissioner of
Patents and Trademarks.
(b) A complete application filed under Sec. 1.53(b) or Sec. 1.53(d)
comprises:
(1) A specification as prescribed by 35 U.S.C. 112, including a
claim or claims, see Secs. 1.71 to 1.77;
(2) An oath or declaration, see Secs. 1.63 and 1.68;
(3) Drawings, when necessary, see Secs. 1.81 to 1.85; and
(4) The prescribed filing fee, see Sec. 1.16.
(c) A complete provisional application filed under Sec. 1.53(c)
comprises:
(1) A cover sheet identifying:
(i) The application as a provisional application,
(ii) The name or names of the inventor or inventors, (see
Sec. 1.41(a)(2)),
(iii) The residence of each named inventor,
(iv) The title of the invention,
(v) The name and registration number of the attorney or agent (if
applicable),
(vi) The docket number used by the person filing the application to
identify the application (if applicable),
(vii) The correspondence address, and
(viii) The name of the U.S. Government agency and Government
contract number (if the invention was made by an agency of the U.S.
Government or under a contract with an agency of the U.S. Government);
(2) A specification as prescribed by the first paragraph of 35
U.S.C. 112, see Sec. 1.71;
(3) Drawings, when necessary, see Secs. 1.81 to 1.85; and
(4) The prescribed filing fee, see Sec. 1.16.
(d) Applicants are encouraged to file an information disclosure
statement in nonprovisional applications. See Sec. 1.97 and Sec. 1.98.
No information disclosure statement may be filed in a provisional
application.
[62 FR 53185, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54664, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.52 Language, paper, writing, margins.
(a) Papers that are to become a part of the permanent United States
Patent and Trademark Office records in the file of a patent application
or a reexamination proceeding. (1) All papers, other than drawings, that
are to become a part of the permanent United States Patent and Trademark
Office records in the file of a patent application or reexamination
proceeding must be on sheets of paper that are the same size, and:
(i) Flexible, strong, smooth, non-shiny, durable, and white;
(ii) Either 21.0 cm by 29.7 cm (DIN size A4) or 21.6 cm by 27.9 cm
(8\1/2\ by 11 inches), with each sheet including a top
[[Page 43]]
margin of at least 2.0 cm (3/4 inch), a left side margin of at least 2.5
cm (1 inch), a right side margin of at least 2.0 cm (3/4 inch), and a
bottom margin of at least 2.0 cm (3/4 inch);
(iii) Written on only one side in portrait orientation;
(iv) Plainly and legibly written either by a typewriter or machine
printer in permanent dark ink or its equivalent; and
(v) Presented in a form having sufficient clarity and contrast
between the paper and the writing thereon to permit the direct
reproduction of readily legible copies in any number by use of
photographic, electrostatic, photo-offset, and microfilming processes
and electronic capture by use of digital imaging and optical character
recognition.
(2) All papers that are to become a part of the permanent records of
the United States Patent and Trademark Office should have no holes in
the sheets as submitted.
(3) The provisions of this paragraph and paragraph (b) of this
section do not apply to the pre-printed information on forms provided by
the Office, or to the copy of the patent submitted in double column
format as the specification in a reissue application or request for
reexamination.
(4) See Sec. 1.58 for chemical and mathematical formulae and tables,
and Sec. 1.84 for drawings.
(5) If papers that do not comply with paragraph (a)(1) of this
section are submitted as part of the permanent record, other than the
drawings, applicant, or the patent owner, or the requester in a
reexamination proceeding, will be notified and must provide substitute
papers that comply with paragraph (a)(1) of this section within a set
time period.
(b) The application (specification, including the claims, drawings,
and oath or declaration) or reexamination proceeding and any amendments
or corrections to the application or reexamination proceeding. (1) The
application or proceeding and any amendments or corrections to the
application (including any translation submitted pursuant to paragraph
(d) of this section) or proceeding, except as provided for in Sec. 1.69
and paragraph (d) of this section, must:
(i) Comply with the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section;
and
(ii) Be in the English language or be accompanied by a translation
of the application and a translation of any corrections or amendments
into the English language together with a statement that the translation
is accurate.
(2) The specification (including the abstract and claims) for other
than reissue applications and reexamination proceedings, and any
amendments for applications (including reissue applications) and
reexamination proceedings to the specification, except as provided for
in Secs. 1.821 through 1.825, must have:
(i) Lines that are 1\1/2\ or double spaced;
(ii) Text written in a nonscript type font (e.g., Arial, Times
Roman, or Courier) lettering style having capital letters which are at
least 0.21 cm (0.08 inch) high; and
(iii) Only a single column of text.
(3) The claim or claims must commence on a separate sheet
(Sec. 1.75(h)).
(4) The abstract must commence on a separate sheet or be submitted
as the first page of the patent in a reissue application or
reexamination proceeding (Sec. 1.72(b)).
(5) Other than in a reissue application or reexamination proceeding,
the pages of the specification including claims and abstract must be
numbered consecutively, starting with 1, the numbers being centrally
located above or preferably, below, the text.
(6) Other than in a reissue application or reexamination proceeding,
the paragraphs of the specification, other than in the claims or
abstract, may be numbered at the time the application is filed, and
should be individually and consecutively numbered using Arabic numerals,
so as to unambiguously identify each paragraph. The number should
consist of at least four numerals enclosed in square brackets, including
leading zeros (e.g., [0001]). The numbers and enclosing brackets should
appear to the right of the left margin as the first item in each
paragraph, before the first word of the paragraph, and should be
highlighted in bold. A gap, equivalent to approximately four spaces,
should follow the number. Nontext elements (e.g., tables, mathematical
or
[[Page 44]]
chemical formulae, chemical structures, and sequence data) are
considered part of the numbered paragraph around or above the elements,
and should not be independently numbered. If a nontext element extends
to the left margin, it should not be numbered as a separate and
independent paragraph. A list is also treated as part of the paragraph
around or above the list, and should not be independently numbered.
Paragraph or section headers (titles), whether abutting the left margin
or centered on the page, are not considered paragraphs and should not be
numbered.
(7) If papers that do not comply with paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(5) of this section are submitted as part of the application,
applicant, or patent owner, or requester in a reexamination proceeding,
will be notified and the applicant, patent owner or requester in a
reexamination proceeding must provide substitute papers that comply with
paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(5) of this section within a set time
period.
(c)(1) Any interlineation, erasure, cancellation or other alteration
of the application papers filed must be made before the signing of any
accompanying oath or declaration pursuant to Sec. 1.63 referring to
those application papers and should be dated and initialed or signed by
the applicant on the same sheet of paper. Application papers containing
alterations made after the signing of an oath or declaration referring
to those application papers must be supported by a supplemental oath or
declaration under Sec. 1.67. In either situation, a substitute
specification (Sec. 1.125) is required if the application papers do not
comply with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(2) After the signing of the oath or declaration referring to the
application papers, amendments may only be made in the manner provided
by Sec. 1.121.
(3) Notwithstanding the provisions of this paragraph, if an oath or
declaration is a copy of the oath or declaration from a prior
application, the application for which such copy is submitted may
contain alterations that do not introduce matter that would have been
new matter in the prior application.
(d) A nonprovisional or provisional application may be filed in a
language other than English.
(1) Nonprovisional application. If a nonprovisional application is
filed in a language other than English, an English language translation
of the non-English language application, a statement that the
translation is accurate, and the processing fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(i) are required. If these items are not filed with the
application, applicant will be notified and given a period of time
within which they must be filed in order to avoid abandonment.
(2) Provisional application. If a provisional application is filed
in a language other than English, an English language translation of the
non-English language provisional application will not be required in the
provisional application. See Sec. 1.78(a) for the requirements for
claiming the benefit of such provisional application in a nonprovisional
application.
(e) Electronic documents that are to become part of the permanent
United States Patent and Trademark Office records in the file of a
patent application or reexamination proceeding. (1) The following
documents may be submitted to the Office on a compact disc in compliance
with this paragraph:
(i) A computer program listing (see Sec. 1.96);
(ii) A ``Sequence Listing'' (submitted under Sec. 1.821(c)); or
(iii) A table (see Sec. 1.58) that has more than 50 pages of text.
(2) A compact disc as used in this part means a Compact Disc-Read
Only Memory (CD-ROM) or a Compact Disc-Recordable (CD-R) in compliance
with this paragraph. A CD-ROM is a ``read-only'' medium on which the
data is pressed into the disc so that it cannot be changed or erased. A
CD-R is a ``write once'' medium on which once the data is recorded, it
is permanent and cannot be changed or erased.
(3)(i) Each compact disc must conform to the International Standards
Organization (ISO) 9660 standard, and the contents of each compact disc
must be in compliance with the American Standard Code for Information
Interchange (ASCII).
(ii) Each compact disc must be enclosed in a hard compact disc case
[[Page 45]]
within an unsealed padded and protective mailing envelope and
accompanied by a transmittal letter on paper in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section. The transmittal letter must list for each
compact disc the machine format (e.g., IBM-PC, Macintosh), the operating
system compatibility (e.g., MS-DOS, MS-Windows, Macintosh, Unix), a list
of files contained on the compact disc including their names, sizes in
bytes, and dates of creation, plus any other special information that is
necessary to identify, maintain, and interpret the information on the
compact disc. Compact discs submitted to the Office will not be returned
to the applicant.
(4) Any compact disc must be submitted in duplicate unless it
contains only the ``Sequence Listing'' in computer readable form
required by Sec. 1.821(e). The compact disc and duplicate copy must be
labeled ``Copy 1'' and ``Copy 2,'' respectively. The transmittal letter
which accompanies the compact disc must include a statement that the two
compact discs are identical. In the event that the two compact discs are
not identical, the Office will use the compact disc labeled ``Copy 1''
for further processing. Any amendment to the information on a compact
disc must be by way of a replacement compact disc in compliance with
this paragraph containing the substitute information, and must be
accompanied by a statement that the replacement compact disc contains no
new matter. The compact disc and copy must be labeled ``COPY 1
REPLACEMENT MM/DD/YYYY'' (with the month, day and year of creation
indicated), and ``COPY 2 REPLACEMENT MM/DD/YYYY,'' respectively.
(5) The specification must contain an incorporation-by-reference of
the material on the compact disc in a separate paragraph
(Sec. 1.77(b)(4)), identifying each compact disc by the names of the
files contained on each of the compact discs, their date of creation and
their sizes in bytes. The Office may require applicant to amend the
specification to include in the paper portion any part of the
specification previously submitted on compact disc.
(6) A compact disc must also be labeled with the following
information:
(i) The name of each inventor (if known);
(ii) Title of the invention;
(iii) The docket number, or application number if known, used by the
person filing the application to identify the application; and
(iv) A creation date of the compact disc.
(v) If multiple compact discs are submitted, the label shall
indicate their order (e.g. ``1 of X'').
(vi) An indication that the disk is ``Copy 1'' or ``Copy 2'' of the
submission. See paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(7) If a file is unreadable on both copies of the disc, the
unreadable file will be treated as not having been submitted. A file is
unreadable if, for example, it is of a format that does not comply with
the requirements of paragraph (e)(3) of this section, it is corrupted by
a computer virus, or it is written onto a defective compact disc.
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685; 35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247; 15 U.S.C.
1113, 1123)
[43 FR 20462, May. 11, 1978, as amended at 47 FR 41275, Sept. 17, 1982;
48 FR 2709, Jan. 20, 1983; 49 FR 554, Jan. 4, 1984; 57 FR 2033, Jan. 17,
1992; 61 FR 42803, Aug. 19, 1996; 62 FR 53186, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR
54664, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57053, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.53 Application number, filing date, and completion of application.
(a) Application number. Any papers received in the Patent and
Trademark Office which purport to be an application for a patent will be
assigned an application number for identification purposes.
(b) Application filing requirements--Nonprovisional application. The
filing date of an application for patent filed under this section,
except for a provisional application under paragraph (c) of this section
or a continued prosecution application under paragraph (d) of this
section, is the date on which a specification as prescribed by 35 U.S.C.
112 containing a description pursuant to Sec. 1.71 and at least one
claim pursuant to Sec. 1.75, and any drawing required by Sec. 1.81(a)
are filed in the Patent and Trademark Office. No new matter may be
introduced into an application after
[[Page 46]]
its filing date. A continuing application, which may be a continuation,
divisional, or continuation-in-part application, may be filed under the
conditions specified in 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c) and Sec. 1.78(a).
(1) A continuation or divisional application that names as inventors
the same or fewer than all of the inventors named in the prior
application may be filed under this paragraph or paragraph (d) of this
section.
(2) A continuation-in-part application (which may disclose and claim
subject matter not disclosed in the prior application) or a continuation
or divisional application naming an inventor not named in the prior
application must be filed under this paragraph.
(c) Application filing requirements--Provisional application. The
filing date of a provisional application is the date on which a
specification as prescribed by the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112, and
any drawing required by Sec. 1.81(a) are filed in the Patent and
Trademark Office. No amendment, other than to make the provisional
application comply with the patent statute and all applicable
regulations, may be made to the provisional application after the filing
date of the provisional application.
(1) A provisional application must also include the cover sheet
required by Sec. 1.51(c)(1), which may be an application data sheet
(Sec. 1.76), or a cover letter identifying the application as a
provisional application. Otherwise, the application will be treated as
an application filed under paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) An application for patent filed under paragraph (b) of this
section may be converted to a provisional application and be accorded
the original filing date of the application filed under paragraph (b) of
this section. The grant of such a request for conversion will not
entitle applicant to a refund of the fees that were properly paid in the
application filed under paragraph (b) of this section. Such a request
for conversion must be accompanied by the processing fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(q) and be filed prior to the earliest of:
(i) Abandonment of the application filed under paragraph (b) of this
section;
(ii) Payment of the issue fee on the application filed under
paragraph (b) of this section;
(iii) Expiration of twelve months after the filing date of the
application filed under paragraph (b) of this section; or
(iv) The filing of a request for a statutory invention registration
under Sec. 1.293 in the application filed under paragraph (b) of this
section.
(3) A provisional application filed under paragraph (c) of this
section may be converted to a nonprovisional application filed under
paragraph (b) of this section and accorded the original filing date of
the provisional application. The conversion of a provisional application
to a nonprovisional application will not result in either the refund of
any fee properly paid in the provisional application or the application
of any such fee to the filing fee, or any other fee, for the
nonprovisional application. Conversion of a provisional application to a
nonprovisional application under this paragraph will result in the term
of any patent to issue from the application being measured from at least
the filing date of the provisional application for which conversion is
requested. Thus, applicants should consider avoiding this adverse patent
term impact by filing a nonprovisional application claiming the benefit
of the provisional application under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) (rather than
converting the provisional application into a nonprovisional application
pursuant to this paragraph). A request to convert a provisional
application to a nonprovisional application must be accompanied by the
fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i) and an amendment including at least one
claim as prescribed by the second paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112, unless the
provisional application under paragraph (c) of this section otherwise
contains at least one claim as prescribed by the second paragraph of 35
U.S.C. 112. The nonprovisional application resulting from conversion of
a provisional application must also include the filing fee for a
nonprovisional application, an oath or declaration by the applicant
pursuant to Secs. 1.63, 1.162, or 1.175, and the surcharge required by
[[Page 47]]
Sec. 1.16(e) if either the basic filing fee for a nonprovisional
application or the oath or declaration was not present on the filing
date accorded the resulting nonprovisional application (i.e., the filing
date of the original provisional application). A request to convert a
provisional application to a nonprovisional application must also be
filed prior to the earliest of:
(i) Abandonment of the provisional application filed under paragraph
(c) of this section; or
(ii) Expiration of twelve months after the filing date of the
provisional application filed under this paragraph (c).
(4) A provisional application is not entitled to the right of
priority under 35 U.S.C. 119 or 365(a) or Sec. 1.55, or to the benefit
of an earlier filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c) or
Sec. 1.78 of any other application. No claim for priority under 35
U.S.C. 119(e) or Sec. 1.78(a)(4) may be made in a design application
based on a provisional application. No request under Sec. 1.293 for a
statutory invention registration may be filed in a provisional
application. The requirements of Secs. 1.821 through 1.825 regarding
application disclosures containing nucleotide and/or amino acid
sequences are not mandatory for provisional applications.
(d) Application filing requirements--Continued prosecution
(nonprovisional) application. (1) A continuation or divisional
application (but not a continuation-in-part) of a prior nonprovisional
application may be filed as a continued prosecution application under
this paragraph, provided that:
(i) The prior nonprovisional application is:
(A) A utility or plant application that was filed under 35 U.S.C.
111(a) before May 29, 2000, and is complete as defined by Sec. 1.51(b);
(B) A design application that is complete as defined by
Sec. 1.51(b); or
(C) The national stage of an international application that was
filed under 35 U.S.C. 363 before May 29, 2000, and is in compliance with
35 U.S.C. 371; and
(ii) The application under this paragraph is filed before the
earliest of:
(A) Payment of the issue fee on the prior application, unless a
petition under Sec. 1.313(c) is granted in the prior application;
(B) Abandonment of the prior application; or
(C) Termination of proceedings on the prior application.
(2) The filing date of a continued prosecution application is the
date on which a request on a separate paper for an application under
this paragraph is filed. An application filed under this paragraph:
(i) Must identify the prior application;
(ii) Discloses and claims only subject matter disclosed in the prior
application;
(iii) Names as inventors the same inventors named in the prior
application on the date the application under this paragraph was filed,
except as provided in paragraph (d)(4) of this section;
(iv) Includes the request for an application under this paragraph,
will utilize the file jacket and contents of the prior application,
including the specification, drawings and oath or declaration from the
prior application, to constitute the new application, and will be
assigned the application number of the prior application for
identification purposes; and
(v) Is a request to expressly abandon the prior application as of
the filing date of the request for an application under this paragraph.
(3) The filing fee for a continued prosecution application filed
under this paragraph is:
(i) The basic filing fee as set forth in Sec. 1.16; and
(ii) Any additional Sec. 1.16 fee due based on the number of claims
remaining in the application after entry of any amendment accompanying
the request for an application under this paragraph and entry of any
amendments under Sec. 1.116 unentered in the prior application which
applicant has requested to be entered in the continued prosecution
application.
(4) An application filed under this paragraph may be filed by fewer
than all the inventors named in the prior application, provided that the
request for an application under this paragraph when filed is
accompanied by a statement requesting deletion of the name or names of
the person or persons who
[[Page 48]]
are not inventors of the invention being claimed in the new application.
No person may be named as an inventor in an application filed under this
paragraph who was not named as an inventor in the prior application on
the date the application under this paragraph was filed, except by way
of correction of inventorship under Sec. 1.48.
(5) Any new change must be made in the form of an amendment to the
prior application as it existed prior to the filing of an application
under this paragraph. No amendment in an application under this
paragraph (a continued prosecution application) may introduce new matter
or matter that would have been new matter in the prior application. Any
new specification filed with the request for an application under this
paragraph will not be considered part of the original application
papers, but will be treated as a substitute specification in accordance
with Sec. 1.125.
(6) The filing of a continued prosecution application under this
paragraph will be construed to include a waiver of confidentiality by
the applicant under 35 U.S.C. 122 to the extent that any member of the
public, who is entitled under the provisions of Sec. 1.14 to access to,
copies of, or information concerning either the prior application or any
continuing application filed under the provisions of this paragraph, may
be given similar access to, copies of, or similar information concerning
the other application or applications in the file jacket.
(7) A request for an application under this paragraph is the
specific reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 to every application
assigned the application number identified in such request. No amendment
in an application under this paragraph may delete this specific
reference to any prior application.
(8) In addition to identifying the application number of the prior
application, applicant should furnish in the request for an application
under this paragraph the following information relating to the prior
application to the best of his or her ability:
(i) Title of invention;
(ii) Name of applicant(s); and
(iii) Correspondence address.
(9) Envelopes containing only requests and fees for filing an
application under this paragraph should be marked ``Box CPA.'' Requests
for an application under this paragraph filed by facsimile transmission
should be clearly marked ``Box CPA.''
(10) See Sec. 1.103(b) for requesting a limited suspension of action
in an application filed under this paragraph.
(e) Failure to meet filing date requirements. (1) If an application
deposited under paragraph (b), (c), or (d) of this section does not meet
the requirements of such paragraph to be entitled to a filing date,
applicant will be so notified, if a correspondence address has been
provided, and given a time period within which to correct the filing
error.
(2) Any request for review of a notification pursuant to paragraph
(e)(1) of this section, or a notification that the original application
papers lack a portion of the specification or drawing(s), must be by way
of a petition pursuant to this paragraph accompanied by the fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(h). In the absence of a timely (Sec. 1.181(f))
petition pursuant to this paragraph, the filing date of an application
in which the applicant was notified of a filing error pursuant to
paragraph (e)(1) of this section will be the date the filing error is
corrected.
(3) If an applicant is notified of a filing error pursuant to
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, but fails to correct the filing error
within the given time period or otherwise timely (Sec. 1.181(f)) take
action pursuant to this paragraph, proceedings in the application will
be considered terminated. Where proceedings in an application are
terminated pursuant to this paragraph, the application may be disposed
of, and any filing fees, less the handling fee set forth in
Sec. 1.21(n), will be refunded.
(f) Completion of application subsequent to filing--Nonprovisional
(including continued prosecution or reissue) application. (1) If an
application which has been accorded a filing date pursuant to paragraph
(b) or (d) of this section does not include the basic filing fee, or if
an application which has been accorded a filing date pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section does not include an oath or declaration by
the applicant pursuant to Secs. 1.63, 1.162 or Sec. 1.175, and applicant
has provided a correspondence address (Sec. 1.33(a)), applicant will be
notified and
[[Page 49]]
given a period of time within which to pay the filing fee, file an oath
or declaration in an application under paragraph (b) of this section,
and pay the surcharge required by Sec. 1.16(e) to avoid abandonment.
(2) If an application which has been accorded a filing date pursuant
to paragraph (b) of this section does not include the basic filing fee
or an oath or declaration by the applicant pursuant to Secs. 1.63, 1.162
or Sec. 1.175, and applicant has not provided a correspondence address
(Sec. 1.33(a)), applicant has two months from the filing date of the
application within which to pay the basic filing fee, file an oath or
declaration, and pay the surcharge required by Sec. 1.16(e) to avoid
abandonment.
(3) This paragraph applies to continuation or divisional
applications under paragraphs (b) or (d) of this section and to
continuation-in-part applications under paragraph (b) of this section.
(4) See Sec. 1.63(d) concerning the submission of a copy of the oath
or declaration from the prior application for a continuation or
divisional application under paragraph (b) of this section.
(5) If applicant does not pay one of the basic filing or the
processing and retention fees (Sec. 1.21(l)) during the pendency of the
application, the Office may dispose of the application.
(g) Completion of application subsequent to filing--provisional
application. (1) If a provisional application which has been accorded a
filing date pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section does not include
the cover sheet required by Sec. 1.51(c)(1) or the basic filing fee
(Sec. 1.16(k)), and applicant has provided a correspondence address
(Sec. 1.33(a)), applicant will be notified and given a period of time
within which to pay the basic filing fee, file a cover sheet
(Sec. 1.51(c)(1)), and pay the surcharge required by Sec. 1.16(l) to
avoid abandonment.
(2) If a provisional application which has been accorded a filing
date pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section does not include the
cover sheet required by Sec. 1.51(c)(1) or the basic filing fee
(Sec. 1.16(k)), and applicant has not provided a correspondence address
(Sec. 1.33(a)), applicant has two months from the filing date of the
application within which to pay the basic filing fee, file a cover sheet
(Sec. 1.51(c)(1)), and pay the surcharge required by Sec. 1.16(l) to
avoid abandonment.
(3) If applicant does not pay the basic filing fee during the
pendency of the application, the Office may dispose of the application.
(h) Subsequent treatment of application--Nonprovisional (including
continued prosecution) application. An application for a patent filed
under paragraphs (b) or (d) of this section will not be placed on the
files for examination until all its required parts, complying with the
rules relating thereto, are received, except that certain minor
informalities may be waived subject to subsequent correction whenever
required.
(i) Subsequent treatment of application--Provisional application. A
provisional application for a patent filed under paragraph (c) of this
section will not be placed on the files for examination and will become
abandoned no later than twelve months after its filing date pursuant to
35 U.S.C. 111(b)(1).
(j) Filing date of international application. The filing date of an
international application designating the United States of America is
treated as the filing date in the United States of America under PCT
Article 11(3), except as provided in 35 U.S.C. 102(e).
[62 FR 53186, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 63 FR 5734, Feb. 4, 1998; 65
FR 14871, Mar. 20, 2000; 65 FR 50104, Aug. 16, 2000; 65 FR 54665, Sept.
8, 2000; 65 FR 78960, Dec. 18, 2000]
Sec. 1.54 Parts of application to be filed together; filing receipt.
(a) It is desirable that all parts of the complete application be
deposited in the Office together; otherwise, a letter must accompany
each part, accurately and clearly connecting it with the other parts of
the application. See Sec. 1.53 (f) and (g) with regard to completion of
an application.
(b) Applicant will be informed of the application number and filing
date by a filing receipt, unless the application is an application filed
under Sec. 1.53(d).
[62 FR 53188, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.55 Claim for foreign priority.
(a) An applicant in a nonprovisional application may claim the
benefit of
[[Page 50]]
the filing date of one or more prior foreign applications under the
conditions specified in 35 U.S.C. 119(a) through (d) and (f), 172, and
365(a) and (b).
(1)(i) In an original application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), the
claim for priority must be presented during the pendency of the
application, and within the later of four months from the actual filing
date of the application or sixteen months from the filing date of the
prior foreign application. This time period is not extendable. The claim
must identify the foreign application for which priority is claimed, as
well as any foreign application for the same subject matter and having a
filing date before that of the application for which priority is
claimed, by specifying the application number, country (or intellectual
property authority), day, month, and year of its filing. The time
periods in this paragraph do not apply in an application under 35 U.S.C.
111(a) if the application is:
(A) A design application; or
(B) An application filed before November 29, 2000.
(ii) In an application that entered the national stage from an
international application after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371, the claim
for priority must be made during the pendency of the application and
within the time limit set forth in the PCT and the Regulations under the
PCT.
(2) The claim for priority and the certified copy of the foreign
application specified in 35 U.S.C. 119(b) or PCT Rule 17 must, in any
event, be filed before the patent is granted. If the claim for priority
or the certified copy of the foreign application is filed after the date
the issue fee is paid, it must be accompanied by the processing fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(i), but the patent will not include the priority
claim unless corrected by a certificate of correction under 35 U.S.C.
255 and Sec. 1.323.
(3) When the application becomes involved in an interference
(Sec. 1.630), when necessary to overcome the date of a reference relied
upon by the examiner, or when deemed necessary by the examiner, the
Office may require that the claim for priority and the certified copy of
the foreign application be filed earlier than provided in paragraphs
(a)(1) or (a)(2) of this section.
(4) An English language translation of a non-English language
foreign application is not required except when the application is
involved in an interference (Sec. 1.630), when necessary to overcome the
date of a reference relied upon by the examiner, or when specifically
required by the examiner. If an English language translation is
required, it must be filed together with a statement that the
translation of the certified copy is accurate.
(b) An applicant in a nonprovisional application may under certain
circumstances claim priority on the basis of one or more applications
for an inventor's certificate in a country granting both inventor's
certificates and patents. To claim the right of priority on the basis of
an application for an inventor's certificate in such a country under 35
U.S.C. 119(d), the applicant when submitting a claim for such right as
specified in paragraph (a) of this section, shall include an affidavit
or declaration. The affidavit or declaration must include a specific
statement that, upon an investigation, he or she is satisfied that to
the best of his or her knowledge, the applicant, when filing the
application for the inventor's certificate, had the option to file an
application for either a patent or an inventor's certificate as to the
subject matter of the identified claim or claims forming the basis for
the claim of priority.
(c) Unless such claim is accepted in accordance with the provisions
of this paragraph, any claim for priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d) or
365(a) not presented within the time period provided by paragraph (a) of
this section is considered to have been waived. If a claim for priority
under 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d) or 365(a) is presented after the time period
provided by paragraph (a) of this section, the claim may be accepted if
the claim identifying the prior foreign application by specifying its
application number, country (or intellectual property authority), and
the day, month, and year of its filing was unintentionally delayed. A
petition to accept a delayed claim for priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-
(d) or 365(a) must be accompanied by:
(1) The claim under 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d) or 365(a) and this section
to the
[[Page 51]]
prior foreign application, unless previously submitted;
(2) The surcharge set forth in Sec. 1.17(t); and
(3) A statement that the entire delay between the date the claim was
due under paragraph (a)(1) of this section and the date the claim was
filed was unintentional. The Commissioner may require additional
information where there is a question whether the delay was
unintentional.
[60 FR 20224, Apr. 25, 1995, as amended at 62 FR 53188, Oct. 10, 1997;
65 FR 57053, Sept. 20, 2000; 65 FR 66502, Nov. 6, 2000; 66 FR 67094,
Dec. 28, 2001]
Sec. 1.56 Duty to disclose information material to patentability.
(a) A patent by its very nature is affected with a public interest.
The public interest is best served, and the most effective patent
examination occurs when, at the time an application is being examined,
the Office is aware of and evaluates the teachings of all information
material to patentability. Each individual associated with the filing
and prosecution of a patent application has a duty of candor and good
faith in dealing with the Office, which includes a duty to disclose to
the Office all information known to that individual to be material to
patentability as defined in this section. The duty to disclose
information exists with respect to each pending claim until the claim is
cancelled or withdrawn from consideration, or the application becomes
abandoned. Information material to the patentability of a claim that is
cancelled or withdrawn from consideration need not be submitted if the
information is not material to the patentability of any claim remaining
under consideration in the application. There is no duty to submit
information which is not material to the patentability of any existing
claim. The duty to disclose all information known to be material to
patentability is deemed to be satisfied if all information known to be
material to patentability of any claim issued in a patent was cited by
the Office or submitted to the Office in the manner prescribed by
Secs. 1.97(b)-(d) and 1.98. However, no patent will be granted on an
application in connection with which fraud on the Office was practiced
or attempted or the duty of disclosure was violated through bad faith or
intentional misconduct. The Office encourages applicants to carefully
examine:
(1) Prior art cited in search reports of a foreign patent office in
a counterpart application, and
(2) The closest information over which individuals associated with
the filing or prosecution of a patent application believe any pending
claim patentably defines, to make sure that any material information
contained therein is disclosed to the Office.
(b) Under this section, information is material to patentability
when it is not cumulative to information already of record or being made
of record in the application, and
(1) It establishes, by itself or in combination with other
information, a prima facie case of unpatentability of a claim; or
(2) It refutes, or is inconsistent with, a position the applicant
takes in:
(i) Opposing an argument of unpatentability relied on by the Office,
or
(ii) Asserting an argument of patentability.
A prima facie case of unpatentability is established when the
information compels a conclusion that a claim is unpatentable under the
preponderance of evidence, burden-of-proof standard, giving each term in
the claim its broadest reasonable construction consistent with the
specification, and before any consideration is given to evidence which
may be submitted in an attempt to establish a contrary conclusion of
patentability.
(c) Individuals associated with the filing or prosecution of a
patent application within the meaning of this section are:
(1) Each inventor named in the application;
(2) Each attorney or agent who prepares or prosecutes the
application; and
(3) Every other person who is substantively involved in the
preparation or prosecution of the application and who is associated with
the inventor, with the assignee or with anyone to whom there is an
obligation to assign the application.
[[Page 52]]
(d) Individuals other than the attorney, agent or inventor may
comply with this section by disclosing information to the attorney,
agent, or inventor.
(e) In any continuation-in-part application, the duty under this
section includes the duty to disclose to the Office all information
known to the person to be material to patentability, as defined in
paragraph (b) of this section, which became available between the filing
date of the prior application and the national or PCT international
filing date of the continuation-in-part application.
[57 FR 2034, Jan. 17, 1992, as amended at 65 FR 54666, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.57 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.58 Chemical and mathematical formulae and tables.
(a) The specification, including the claims, may contain chemical
and mathematical formulas, but shall not contain drawings or flow
diagrams. The description portion of the specification may contain
tables; claims may contain tables either if necessary to conform to 35
U.S.C. 112 or if otherwise found to be desirable.
(b) Tables that are submitted in electronic form (Secs. 1.96(c) and
1.821(c)) must maintain the spatial relationships (e.g., columns and
rows) of the table elements and preserve the information they convey.
Chemical and mathematical formulae must be encoded to maintain the
proper positioning of their characters when displayed in order to
preserve their intended meaning.
(c) Chemical and mathematical formulae and tables must be presented
in compliance with Sec. 1.52 (a) and (b), except that chemical and
mathematical formulae or tables may be placed in a landscape orientation
if they cannot be presented satisfactorily in a portrait orientation.
Typewritten characters used in such formulae and tables must be chosen
from a block (nonscript) type font or lettering style having capital
letters which are at least 0.21 cm. (0.08 inch) high (e.g., elite type).
A space at least 0.64 cm. (\1/4\ inch) high should be provided between
complex formulae and tables and the text. Tables should have the lines
and columns of data closely spaced to conserve space, consistent with a
high degree of legibility.
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685)
[43 FR 20463, May 11, 1978, as amended at 61 FR 42803, Aug. 19, 1996; 65
FR 54667, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.59 Expungement of information or copy of papers in application file.
(a)(1) Information in an application will not be expunged and
returned, except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section. See
Sec. 1.618 for return of unauthorized and improper papers in
interferences.
(2) Information forming part of the original disclosure (i.e.,
written specification including the claims, drawings, and any
preliminary amendment specifically incorporated into an executed oath or
declaration under Secs. 1.63 and 1.175) will not be expunged from the
application file.
(b) An applicant may request that the Office expunge and return
information, other than what is excluded by paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, by filing a petition under this paragraph. Any petition to
expunge and return information from an application must include the fee
set forth in Sec. 1.17(h) and establish to the satisfaction of the
Commissioner that the return of the information is appropriate.
(c) Upon request by an applicant and payment of the fee specified in
Sec. 1.19(b), the Office will furnish copies of an application, unless
the application has been disposed of (see Sec. 1.53 (e), (f) and (g)).
The Office cannot provide or certify copies of an application that has
been disposed of.
[62 FR 53188, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54667, Sept. 8, 2000]
Secs. 1.60-1.62 [Reserved]
Oath or Declaration
Sec. 1.63 Oath or declaration.
(a) An oath or declaration filed under Sec. 1.51(b)(2) as a part of
a nonprovisional application must:
(1) Be executed, i.e., signed, in accordance with either Sec. 1.66
or Sec. 1.68. There is no minimum age for a person to be qualified to
sign, but the person
[[Page 53]]
must be competent to sign, i.e., understand the document that the person
is signing;
(2) Identify each inventor by full name, including the family name,
and at least one given name without abbreviation together with any other
given name or initial;
(3) Identify the country of citizenship of each inventor; and
(4) State that the person making the oath or declaration believes
the named inventor or inventors to be the original and first inventor or
inventors of the subject matter which is claimed and for which a patent
is sought.
(b) In addition to meeting the requirements of paragraph (a) of this
section, the oath or declaration must also:
(1) Identify the application to which it is directed;
(2) State that the person making the oath or declaration has
reviewed and understands the contents of the application, including the
claims, as amended by any amendment specifically referred to in the oath
or declaration; and
(3) State that the person making the oath or declaration
acknowledges the duty to disclose to the Office all information known to
the person to be material to patentability as defined in Sec. 1.56.
(c) Unless such information is supplied on an application data sheet
in accordance with Sec. 1.76, the oath or declaration must also
identify:
(1) The mailing address, and the residence if an inventor lives at a
location which is different from where the inventor customarily receives
mail, of each inventor; and
(2) Any foreign application for patent (or inventor's certificate)
for which a claim for priority is made pursuant to Sec. 1.55, and any
foreign application having a filing date before that of the application
on which priority is claimed, by specifying the application number,
country, day, month, and year of its filing.
(d)(1) A newly executed oath or declaration is not required under
Sec. 1.51(b)(2) and Sec. 1.53(f) in a continuation or divisional
application, provided that:
(i) The prior nonprovisional application contained an oath or
declaration as prescribed by paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section;
(ii) The continuation or divisional application was filed by all or
by fewer than all of the inventors named in the prior application;
(iii) The specification and drawings filed in the continuation or
divisional application contain no matter that would have been new matter
in the prior application; and
(iv) A copy of the executed oath or declaration filed in the prior
application, showing the signature or an indication thereon that it was
signed, is submitted for the continuation or divisional application.
(2) The copy of the executed oath or declaration submitted under
this paragraph for a continuation or divisional application must be
accompanied by a statement requesting the deletion of the name or names
of the person or persons who are not inventors in the continuation or
divisional application.
(3) Where the executed oath or declaration of which a copy is
submitted for a continuation or divisional application was originally
filed in a prior application accorded status under Sec. 1.47, the copy
of the executed oath or declaration for such prior application must be
accompanied by:
(i) A copy of the decision granting a petition to accord Sec. 1.47
status to the prior application, unless all inventors or legal
representatives have filed an oath or declaration to join in an
application accorded status under Sec. 1.47 of which the continuation or
divisional application claims a benefit under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, or
365(c); and
(ii) If one or more inventor(s) or legal representative(s) who
refused to join in the prior application or could not be found or
reached has subsequently joined in the prior application or another
application of which the continuation or divisional application claims a
benefit under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, or 365(c), a copy of the subsequently
executed oath(s) or declaration(s) filed by the inventor or legal
representative to join in the application.
(4) Where the power of attorney (or authorization of agent) or
correspondence address was changed during the prosecution of the prior
application,
[[Page 54]]
the change in power of attorney (or authorization of agent) or
correspondence address must be identified in the continuation or
divisional application. Otherwise, the Office may not recognize in the
continuation or divisional application the change of power of attorney
(or authorization of agent) or correspondence address during the
prosecution of the prior application.
(5) A newly executed oath or declaration must be filed in a
continuation or divisional application naming an inventor not named in
the prior application.
(e) A newly executed oath or declaration must be filed in any
continuation-in-part application, which application may name all, more,
or fewer than all of the inventors named in the prior application.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2711, Jan. 20, 1983; 48 FR 4285, Jan. 31, 1983, as amended at 57
FR 2034, Jan. 17, 1992; 60 FR 20225, Apr. 25, 1995; 62 FR 53188, Oct.
10, 1997; 65 FR 54667, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.64 Person making oath or declaration.
(a) The oath or declaration (Sec. 1.63), including any supplemental
oath or declaration (Sec. 1.67), must be made by all of the actual
inventors except as provided for in Secs. 1.42, 1.43, 1.47, or
Sec. 1.67.
(b) If the person making the oath or declaration or any supplemental
oath or declaration is not the inventor (Secs. 1.42, 1.43, 1.47, or
Sec. 1.67), the oath or declaration shall state the relationship of the
person to the inventor, and, upon information and belief, the facts
which the inventor is required to state. If the person signing the oath
or declaration is the legal representative of a deceased inventor, the
oath or declaration shall also state that the person is a legal
representative and the citizenship, residence, and mailing address of
the legal representative.
[65 FR 54667, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.66 Officers authorized to administer oaths.
(a) The oath or affirmation may be made before any person within the
United States authorized by law to administer oaths. An oath made in a
foreign country may be made before any diplomatic or consular officer of
the United States authorized to administer oaths, or before any officer
having an official seal and authorized to administer oaths in the
foreign country in which the applicant may be, whose authority shall be
proved by a certificate of a diplomatic or consular officer of the
United States, or by an apostille of an official designated by a foreign
country which, by treaty or convention, accords like effect to
apostilles of designated officials in the United States. The oath shall
be attested in all cases in this and other countries, by the proper
official seal of the officer before whom the oath or affirmation is
made. Such oath or affirmation shall be valid as to execution if it
complies with the laws of the State or country where made. When the
person before whom the oath or affirmation is made in this country is
not provided with a seal, his official character shall be established by
competent evidence, as by a certificate from a clerk of a court of
record or other proper officer having a seal.
(b) When the oath is taken before an officer in a country foreign to
the United States, any accompanying application papers, except the
drawings, must be attached together with the oath and a ribbon passed
one or more times through all the sheets of the application, except the
drawings, and the ends of said ribbon brought together under the seal
before the latter is affixed and impressed, or each sheet must be
impressed with the official seal of the officer before whom the oath is
taken. If the papers as filed are not properly ribboned or each sheet
impressed with the seal, the case will be accepted for examination, but
before it is allowed, duplicate papers, prepared in compliance with the
foregoing sentence, must be filed.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[47 FR 41275, Sept. 17, 1982]
Sec. 1.67 Supplemental oath or declaration.
(a) The Office may require, or inventors and applicants may submit,
a supplemental oath or declaration meeting the requirements of Sec. 1.63
or Sec. 1.162 to correct any deficiencies or inaccuracies
[[Page 55]]
present in the earlier filed oath or declaration.
(1) Deficiencies or inaccuracies relating to all the inventors or
applicants (Secs. 1.42, 1.43, or Sec. 1.47) may be corrected with a
supplemental oath or declaration signed by all the inventors or
applicants.
(2) Deficiencies or inaccuracies relating to fewer than all of the
inventor(s) or applicant(s) (Secs. 1.42, 1.43 or Sec. 1.47) may be
corrected with a supplemental oath or declaration identifying the entire
inventive entity but signed only by the inventor(s) or applicant(s) to
whom the error or deficiency relates.
(3) Deficiencies or inaccuracies due to the failure to meet the
requirements of Sec. 1.63(c) (e.g., to correct the omission of a mailing
address of an inventor) in an oath or declaration may be corrected with
an application data sheet in accordance with Sec. 1.76.
(4) Submission of a supplemental oath or declaration or an
application data sheet (Sec. 1.76), as opposed to who must sign the
supplemental oath or declaration or an application data sheet, is
governed by Sec. 1.33(a)(2) and paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) A supplemental oath or declaration meeting the requirements of
Sec. 1.63 must be filed when a claim is presented for matter originally
shown or described but not substantially embraced in the statement of
invention or claims originally presented or when an oath or declaration
submitted in accordance with Sec. 1.53(f) after the filing of the
specification and any required drawings specifically and improperly
refers to an amendment which includes new matter. No new matter may be
introduced into a nonprovisional application after its filing date even
if a supplemental oath or declaration is filed. In proper situations,
the oath or declaration here required may be made on information and
belief by an applicant other than the inventor.
(c) [Reserved]
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2711, Jan. 20, 1983, as amended at 57 FR 2034, Jan. 17, 1992; 60
FR 20225, Apr. 25, 1995; 62 FR 53189, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 54667, Sept.
8, 2000]
Sec. 1.68 Declaration in lieu of oath.
Any document to be filed in the Patent and Trademark Office and
which is required by any law, rule, or other regulation to be under oath
may be subscribed to by a written declaration. Such declaration may be
used in lieu of the oath otherwise required, if, and only if, the
declarant is on the same document, warned that willful false statements
and the like are punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both (18 U.S.C.
1001) and may jeopardize the validity of the application or any patent
issuing thereon. The declarant must set forth in the body of the
declaration that all statements made of the declarant's own knowledge
are true and that all statements made on information and belief are
believed to be true.
[49 FR 48452, Dec. 12, 1984]
Sec. 1.69 Foreign language oaths and declarations.
(a) Whenever an individual making an oath or declaration cannot
understand English, the oath or declaration must be in a language that
such individual can understand and shall state that such individual
understands the content of any documents to which the oath or
declaration relates.
(b) Unless the text of any oath or declaration in a language other
than English is a form provided or approved by the Patent and Trademark
Office, it must be accompanied by an English translation together with a
statement that the translation is accurate, except that in the case of
an oath or declaration filed under Sec. 1.63, the translation may be
filed in the Office no later than two months from the date applicant is
notified to file the translation.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[42 FR 5594, Jan. 28, 1977, as amended at 48 FR 2711, Jan. 20, 1983; 62
FR 53189, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.70 [Reserved]
Specification
Authority: Secs. 1.71 to 1.79 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 112.
[[Page 56]]
Sec. 1.71 Detailed description and specification of the invention.
(a) The specification must include a written description of the
invention or discovery and of the manner and process of making and using
the same, and is required to be in such full, clear, concise, and exact
terms as to enable any person skilled in the art or science to which the
invention or discovery appertains, or with which it is most nearly
connected, to make and use the same.
(b) The specification must set forth the precise invention for which
a patent is solicited, in such manner as to distinguish it from other
inventions and from what is old. It must describe completely a specific
embodiment of the process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter
or improvement invented, and must explain the mode of operation or
principle whenever applicable. The best mode contemplated by the
inventor of carrying out his invention must be set forth.
(c) In the case of an improvement, the specification must
particularly point out the part or parts of the process, machine,
manufacture, or composition of matter to which the improvement relates,
and the description should be confined to the specific improvement and
to such parts as necessarily cooperate with it or as may be necessary to
a complete understanding or description of it.
(d) A copyright or mask work notice may be placed in a design or
utility patent application adjacent to copyright and mask work material
contained therein. The notice may appear at any appropriate portion of
the patent application disclosure. For notices in drawings, see
Sec. 1.84(s). The content of the notice must be limited to only those
elements provided for by law. For example, ``[copy]1983 John
Doe'' (17 U.S.C. 401) and `` *M* John Doe'' (17 U.S.C. 909) would be
properly limited and, under current statutes, legally sufficient notices
of copyright and mask work, respectively. Inclusion of a copyright or
mask work notice will be permitted only if the authorization language
set forth in paragraph (e) of this section is included at the beginning
(preferably as the first paragraph) of the specification.
(e) The authorization shall read as follows:
A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains
material which is subject to (copyright or mask work) protection. The
(copyright or mask work) owner has no objection to the facsimile
reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure,
as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records,
but otherwise reserves all (copyright or mask work) rights whatsoever.
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 53 FR 47808, Nov. 28, 1988;
58 FR 38723, July 20, 1993]
Sec. 1.72 Title and abstract.
(a) The title of the invention may not exceed 500 characters in
length and must be as short and specific as possible. Characters that
cannot be captured and recorded in the Office's automated information
systems may not be reflected in the Office's records in such systems or
in documents created by the Office. Unless the title is supplied in an
application data sheet (Sec. 1.76), the title of the invention should
appear as a heading on the first page of the specification.
(b) A brief abstract of the technical disclosure in the
specification must commence on a separate sheet, preferably following
the claims, under the heading ``Abstract'' or ``Abstract of the
Disclosure.'' The abstract in an application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111
may not exceed 150 words in length. The purpose of the abstract is to
enable the United States Patent and Trademark Office and the public
generally to determine quickly from a cursory inspection the nature and
gist of the technical disclosure. The abstract will not be used for
interpreting the scope of the claims.
[65 FR 54667, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57054, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.73 Summary of the invention.
A brief summary of the invention indicating its nature and
substance, which may include a statement of the object of the invention,
should precede the detailed description. Such summary should, when set
forth, be commensurate with the invention as claimed and any object
recited should be that of the invention as claimed.
[[Page 57]]
Sec. 1.74 Reference to drawings.
When there are drawings, there shall be a brief description of the
several views of the drawings and the detailed description of the
invention shall refer to the different views by specifying the numbers
of the figures and to the different parts by use of reference letters or
numerals (preferably the latter).
Sec. 1.75 Claim(s).
(a) The specification must conclude with a claim particularly
pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter which the
applicant regards as his invention or discovery.
(b) More than one claim may be presented provided they differ
substantially from each other and are not unduly multiplied.
(c) One or more claims may be presented in dependent form, referring
back to and further limiting another claim or claims in the same
application. Any dependent claim which refers to more than one other
claim (``multiple dependent claim'') shall refer to such other claims in
the alternative only. A multiple dependent claim shall not serve as a
basis for any other multiple dependent claim. For fee calculation
purposes under Sec. 1.16, a multiple dependent claim will be considered
to be that number of claims to which direct reference is made therein.
For fee calculation purposes, also, any claim depending from a multiple
dependent claim will be considered to be that number of claims to which
direct reference is made in that multiple dependent claim. In addition
to the other filing fees, any original application which is filed with,
or is amended to include, multiple dependent claims must have paid
therein the fee set forth in Sec. 1.16(d). Claims in dependent form
shall be construed to include all the limitations of the claim
incorporated by reference into the dependent claim. A multiple dependent
claim shall be construed to incorporate by reference all the limitations
of each of the particular claims in relation to which it is being
considered.
(d)(1) The claim or claims must conform to the invention as set
forth in the remainder of the specification and the terms and phrases
used in the claims must find clear support or antecedent basis in the
description so that the meaning of the terms in the claims may be
ascertainable by reference to the description. (See Sec. 1.58(a).)
(2) See Secs. 1.141 to 1.146 as to claiming different inventions in
one application.
(e) Where the nature of the case admits, as in the case of an
improvement, any independent claim should contain in the following
order:
(1) A preamble comprising a general description of all the elements
or steps of the claimed combination which are conventional or known,
(2) A phrase such as ``wherein the improvement comprises,'' and
(3) Those elements, steps and/or relationships which constitute that
portion of the claimed combination which the applicant considers as the
new or improved portion.
(f) If there are several claims, they shall be numbered
consecutively in Arabic numerals.
(g) The least restrictive claim should be presented as claim number
1, and all dependent claims should be grouped together with the claim or
claims to which they refer to the extent practicable.
(h) The claim or claims must commence on a separate sheet.
(i) Where a claim sets forth a plurality of elements or steps, each
element or step of the claim should be separated by a line indentation.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1126)
[31 FR 12922, Oct. 4, 1966, as amended at 36 FR 12690, July 3, 1971; 37
FR 21995, Oct. 18, 1972; 43 FR 4015, Jan. 31, 1978; 47 FR 41276, Sept.
17, 1982; 61 FR 42803, Aug. 19, 1996]
Sec. 1.76 Application data sheet.
(a) Application data sheet. An application data sheet is a sheet or
sheets, that may be voluntarily submitted in either provisional or
nonprovisional applications, which contains bibliographic data, arranged
in a format specified by the Office. If an application data sheet is
provided, the application data sheet is part of the provisional or
nonprovisional application for which it has been submitted.
(b) Bibliographic data. Bibliographic data as used in paragraph (a)
of this section includes:
(1) Applicant information. This information includes the name,
residence,
[[Page 58]]
mailing address, and citizenship of each applicant (Sec. 1.41(b)). The
name of each applicant must include the family name, and at least one
given name without abbreviation together with any other given name or
initial. If the applicant is not an inventor, this information also
includes the applicant's authority (Secs. 1.42, 1.43, and 1.47) to apply
for the patent on behalf of the inventor.
(2) Correspondence information. This information includes the
correspondence address, which may be indicated by reference to a
customer number, to which correspondence is to be directed (see
Sec. 1.33(a)).
(3) Application information. This information includes the title of
the invention, a suggested classification, by class and subclass, the
Technology Center to which the subject matter of the invention is
assigned, the total number of drawing sheets, a suggested drawing figure
for publication (in a nonprovisional application), any docket number
assigned to the application, the type of application (e.g., utility,
plant, design, reissue, provisional), whether the application discloses
any significant part of the subject matter of an application under a
secrecy order pursuant to Sec. 5.2 of this chapter (see Sec. 5.2(c)),
and, for plant applications, the Latin name of the genus and species of
the plant claimed, as well as the variety denomination. The suggested
classification and Technology Center information should be supplied for
provisional applications whether or not claims are present. If claims
are not present in a provisional application, the suggested
classification and Technology Center should be based upon the
disclosure.
(4) Representative information. This information includes the
registration number of each practitioner having a power of attorney or
authorization of agent in the application (preferably by reference to a
customer number). Providing this information in the application data
sheet does not constitute a power of attorney or authorization of agent
in the application (see Sec. 1.34(b)).
(5) Domestic priority information. This information includes the
application number, the filing date, the status (including patent number
if available), and relationship of each application for which a benefit
is claimed under 35 U.S.C. 119(e), 120, 121, or 365(c). Providing this
information in the application data sheet constitutes the specific
reference required by 35 U.S.C. 119(e) or 120, and Sec. 1.78(a)(2) or
Sec. 1.78(a)(4), and need not otherwise be made part of the
specification.
(6) Foreign priority information. This information includes the
application number, country, and filing date of each foreign application
for which priority is claimed, as well as any foreign application having
a filing date before that of the application for which priority is
claimed. Providing this information in the application data sheet
constitutes the claim for priority as required by 35 U.S.C. 119(b) and
Sec. 1.55(a).
(7) Assignee information. This information includes the name (either
person or juristic entity) and address of the assignee of the entire
right, title, and interest in an application. Providing this information
in the application data sheet does not substitute for compliance with
any requirement of part 3 of this chapter to have an assignment recorded
by the Office.
(c) Supplemental application data sheets. Supplemental application
data sheets:
(1) May be subsequently supplied prior to payment of the issue fee
either to correct or update information in a previously submitted
application data sheet, or an oath or declaration under Sec. 1.63 or
Sec. 1.67, except that inventorship changes are governed by Sec. 1.48,
correspondence changes are governed by Sec. 1.33(a), and citizenship
changes are governed by Sec. 1.63 or Sec. 1.67; and
(2) Should identify the information that is being changed (added,
deleted, or modified) and therefore need not contain all the previously
submitted information that has not changed.
(d) Inconsistencies between application data sheet and oath or
declaration. For inconsistencies between information that is supplied by
both an application data sheet under this section and by an oath or
declaration under Secs. 1.63 and 1.67:
(1) The latest submitted information will govern notwithstanding
whether supplied by an application data sheet,
[[Page 59]]
or by a Sec. 1.63 or Sec. 1.67 oath or declaration, except as provided
by paragraph (d)(3) of this section;
(2) The information in the application data sheet will govern when
the inconsistent information is supplied at the same time by a Sec. 1.63
or Sec. 1.67 oath or declaration, except as provided by paragraph (d)(3)
of this section;
(3) The oath or declaration under Sec. 1.63 or Sec. 1.67 governs
inconsistencies with the application data sheet in the naming of
inventors (Sec. 1.41(a)(1)) and setting forth their citizenship (35
U.S.C. 115);
(4) The Office will initially capture bibliographic information from
the application data sheet (notwithstanding whether an oath or
declaration governs the information). Thus, the Office shall generally
not look to an oath or declaration under Sec. 1.63 to see if the
bibliographic information contained therein is consistent with the
bibliographic information captured from an application data sheet
(whether the oath or declaration is submitted prior to or subsequent to
the application data sheet). Captured bibliographic information derived
from an application data sheet containing errors may be recaptured by a
request therefor and the submission of a supplemental application data
sheet, an oath or declaration under Sec. 1.63 or Sec. 1.67, or a letter
pursuant to Sec. 1.33(b).
[65 FR 54668, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57054, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.77 Arrangement of application elements.
(a) The elements of the application, if applicable, should appear in
the following order:
(1) Utility application transmittal form.
(2) Fee transmittal form.
(3) Application data sheet (see Sec. 1.76).
(4) Specification.
(5) Drawings.
(6) Executed oath or declaration.
(b) The specification should include the following sections in
order:
(1) Title of the invention, which may be accompanied by an
introductory portion stating the name, citizenship, and residence of the
applicant (unless included in the application data sheet).
(2) Cross-reference to related applications (unless included in the
application data sheet).
(3) Statement regarding federally sponsored research or development.
(4) Reference to a ``Sequence Listing,'' a table, or a computer
program listing appendix submitted on a compact disc and an
incorporation-by-reference of the material on the compact disc (see
Sec. 1.52(e)(5)). The total number of compact discs including duplicates
and the files on each compact disc shall be specified.
(5) Background of the invention.
(6) Brief summary of the invention.
(7) Brief description of the several views of the drawing.
(8) Detailed description of the invention.
(9) A claim or claims.
(10) Abstract of the disclosure.
(11) ``Sequence Listing,'' if on paper (see Secs. 1.821 through
1.825).
(c) The text of the specification sections defined in paragraphs
(b)(1) through (b)(11) of this section, if applicable, should be
preceded by a section heading in uppercase and without underlining or
bold type.
[65 FR 54668, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.78 Claiming benefit of earlier filing date and cross-references to other applications.
(a)(1) A nonprovisional application or international application
designating the United States of America may claim an invention
disclosed in one or more prior-filed copending nonprovisional
applications or international applications designating the United States
of America. In order for an application to claim the benefit of a prior-
filed copending nonprovisional application or international application
designating the United States of America, each prior-filed application
must name as an inventor at least one inventor named in the later-filed
application and disclose the named inventor's invention claimed in at
least one claim of the later-filed application in the manner provided by
the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112. In addition, each prior-filed
application must be:
(i) An international application entitled to a filing date in
accordance with
[[Page 60]]
PCT Article 11 and designating the United States of America; or
(ii) Complete as set forth in Sec. 1.51(b); or
(iii) Entitled to a filing date as set forth in Sec. 1.53(b) or
Sec. 1.53(d) and include the basic filing fee set forth in Sec. 1.16; or
(iv) Entitled to a filing date as set forth in Sec. 1.53(b) and have
paid therein the processing and retention fee set forth in Sec. 1.21(l)
within the time period set forth in Sec. 1.53(f).
(2)(i) Except for a continued prosecution application filed under
Sec. 1.53(d), any nonprovisional application or international
application designating the United States of America claiming the
benefit of one or more prior-filed copending nonprovisional applications
or international applications designating the United States of America
must contain or be amended to contain a reference to each such prior-
filed application, identifying it by application number (consisting of
the series code and serial number) or international application number
and international filing date and indicating the relationship of the
applications. Cross references to other related applications may be made
when appropriate (see Sec. 1.14).
(ii) This reference must be submitted during the pendency of the
later-filed application. If the later-filed application is an
application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), this reference must also be
submitted within the later of four months from the actual filing date of
the later-filed application or sixteen months from the filing date of
the prior-filed application. If the later-filed application is a
nonprovisional application which entered the national stage from an
international application after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371, this
reference must also be submitted within the later of four months from
the date on which the national stage commenced under 35 U.S.C. 371(b) or
(f) in the later-filed international application or sixteen months from
the filing date of the prior-filed application. These time periods are
not extendable. Except as provided in paragraph (a)(3) of this section,
the failure to timely submit the reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 and
paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section is considered a waiver of any
benefit under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, or 365(c) to such prior-filed
application. The time periods in this paragraph do not apply if the
later-filed application is:
(A) An application for a design patent;
(B) An application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) before November 29,
2000; or
(C) A nonprovisional application which entered the national stage
after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371 from an international application
filed under 35 U.S.C. 363 before November 29, 2000.
(iii) If the later-filed application is a nonprovisional
application, the reference required by this paragraph must be included
in an application data sheet (Sec. 1.76), or the specification must
contain or be amended to contain such reference in the first sentence
following the title.
(iv) The request for a continued prosecution application under
Sec. 1.53(d) is the specific reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 to the
prior-filed application. The identification of an application by
application number under this section is the identification of every
application assigned that application number necessary for a specific
reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 to every such application assigned
that application number.
(3) If the reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 and paragraph (a)(2)
of this section is presented in a nonprovisional application after the
time period provided by paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section, the claim
under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, or 365(c) for the benefit of a prior-filed
copending nonprovisional application or international application
designating the United States of America may be accepted if the
reference identifying the prior-filed application by application number
or international application number and international filing date was
unintentionally delayed. A petition to accept an unintentionally delayed
claim under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, or 365(c) for the benefit of a prior-
filed application must be accompanied by:
(i) The reference required by 35 U.S.C. 120 and paragraph (a)(2) of
this section to the prior-filed application, unless previously
submitted;
(ii) The surcharge set forth in Sec. 1.17(t); and
[[Page 61]]
(iii) A statement that the entire delay between the date the claim
was due under paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section and the date the
claim was filed was unintentional. The Commissioner may require
additional information where there is a question whether the delay was
unintentional.
(4) A nonprovisional application, other than for a design patent, or
an international application designating the United States of America
may claim an invention disclosed in one or more prior-filed provisional
applications. In order for an application to claim the benefit of one or
more prior-filed provisional applications, each prior-filed provisional
application must name as an inventor at least one inventor named in the
later-filed application and disclose the named inventor's invention
claimed in at least one claim of the later-filed application in the
manner provided by the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112. In addition,
each prior-filed provisional application must be entitled to a filing
date as set forth in Sec. 1.53(c), and the basic filing fee set forth in
Sec. 1.16(k) must be paid within the time period set forth in
Sec. 1.53(g).
(5)(i) Any nonprovisional application or international application
designating the United States of America claiming the benefit of one or
more prior-filed provisional applications must contain or be amended to
contain a reference to each such prior-filed provisional application,
identifying it by the provisional application number (consisting of
series code and serial number).
(ii) This reference must be submitted during the pendency of the
later-filed application. If the later-filed application is an
application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), this reference must also be
submitted within the later of four months from the actual filing date of
the later-filed application or sixteen months from the filing date of
the prior-filed provisional application. If the later-filed application
is a nonprovisional application which entered the national stage from an
international application after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371, this
reference must also be submitted within the later of four months from
the date on which the national stage commenced under 35 U.S.C. 371(b) or
(f) in the later-filed international application or sixteen months from
the filing date of the prior-filed provisional application. These time
periods are not extendable. Except as provided in paragraph (a)(6) of
this section, the failure to timely submit the reference is considered a
waiver of any benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) to such prior-filed
provisional application. The time periods in this paragraph do not apply
if the later-filed application is:
(A) An application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) before November 29,
2000; or
(B) A nonprovisional application which entered the national stage
after compliance with 35 U.S.C. 371 from an international application
filed under 35 U.S.C. 363 before November 29, 2000.
(iii) If the later-filed application is a nonprovisional
application, the reference required by this paragraph must be included
in an application data sheet (Sec. 1.76), or the specification must
contain or be amended to contain such reference in the first sentence
following the title.
(iv) If the prior-filed provisional application was filed in a
language other than English and an English-language translation of the
prior-filed provisional application and a statement that the translation
is accurate were not previously filed in the prior-filed provisional
application or the later-filed nonprovisional application, applicant
will be notified and given a period of time within which to file an
English-language translation of the non-English-language prior-filed
provisional application and a statement that the translation is
accurate. In a pending nonprovisional application, failure to timely
reply to such a notice will result in abandonment of the application.
(6) If the reference required by 35 U.S.C. 119(e) and paragraph
(a)(5) of this section is presented in a nonprovisional application
after the time period provided by paragraph (a)(5)(ii) of this section,
the claim under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) for the benefit of a prior-filed
provisional application may be accepted during the pendency of the
later-filed application if the reference identifying
[[Page 62]]
the prior-filed application by provisional application number was
unintentionally delayed. A petition to accept an unintentionally delayed
claim under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) for the benefit of a prior-filed
provisional application must be accompanied by:
(i) The reference required by 35 U.S.C. 119(e) and paragraph (a)(5)
of this section to the prior-filed provisional application, unless
previously submitted;
(ii) The surcharge set forth in Sec. 1.17(t); and
(iii) A statement that the entire delay between the date the claim
was due under paragraph (a)(5)(ii) of this section and the date the
claim was filed was unintentional. The Commissioner may require
additional information where there is a question whether the delay was
unintentional.
(b) Where two or more applications filed by the same applicant
contain conflicting claims, elimination of such claims from all but one
application may be required in the absence of good and sufficient reason
for their retention during pendency in more than one application.
(c) If an application or a patent under reexamination and at least
one other application naming different inventors are owned by the same
party and contain conflicting claims, and there is no statement of
record indicating that the claimed inventions were commonly owned or
subject to an obligation of assignment to the same person at the time
the later invention was made, the Office may require the assignee to
state whether the claimed inventions were commonly owned or subject to
an obligation of assignment to the same person at the time the later
invention was made, and, if not, indicate which named inventor is the
prior inventor.
(Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685; 35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[36 FR 7312, Apr. 17, 1971, as amended at 50 FR 9380, Mar. 7, 1985; 50
FR 11366, Mar. 21, 1985; 58 FR 54509, Oct. 22, 1993; 60 FR 20225, Apr.
25, 1995; 61 FR 42804, Aug. 19, 1996; 62 FR 53189, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR
14872, Mar. 20, 2000; 65 FR 54669, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57054, Sept. 20,
2000; 66 FR 67095, Dec. 28, 2001]
Sec. 1.79 Reservation clauses not permitted.
A reservation for a future application of subject matter disclosed
but not claimed in a pending application will not be permitted in the
pending application, but an application disclosing unclaimed subject
matter may contain a reference to a later filed application of the same
applicant or owned by a common assignee disclosing and claiming that
subject matter.
The Drawings
Authority: Secs. 1.81 to 1.88 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 113.
Sec. 1.81 Drawings required in patent application.
(a) The applicant for a patent is required to furnish a drawing of
his or her invention where necessary for the understanding of the
subject matter sought to be patented; this drawing, or a high quality
copy thereof, must be filed with the application. Since corrections are
the responsibility of the applicant, the original drawing(s) should be
retained by the applicant for any necessary future correction.
(b) Drawings may include illustrations which facilitate an
understanding of the invention (for example, flow sheets in cases of
processes, and diagrammatic views).
(c) Whenever the nature of the subject matter sought to be patented
admits of illustration by a drawing without its being necessary for the
understanding of the subject matter and the applicant has not furnished
such a drawing, the examiner will require its submission within a time
period of not less than two months from the date of the sending of a
notice thereof.
(d) Drawings submitted after the filing date of the application may
not be used to overcome any insufficiency of the specification due to
lack of an enabling disclosure or otherwise inadequate disclosure
therein, or to supplement the original disclosure thereof for the
purpose of interpretation of the scope of any claim.
[43 FR 4015, Jan. 31, 1978, as amended at 53 FR 47808, Nov. 28, 1988]
[[Page 63]]
Sec. 1.83 Content of drawing.
(a) The drawing in a nonprovisional application must show every
feature of the invention specified in the claims. However, conventional
features disclosed in the description and claims, where their detailed
illustration is not essential for a proper understanding of the
invention, should be illustrated in the drawing in the form of a
graphical drawing symbol or a labeled representation (e.g., a labeled
rectangular box).
(b) When the invention consists of an improvement on an old machine
the drawing must when possible exhibit, in one or more views, the
improved portion itself, disconnected from the old structure, and also
in another view, so much only of the old structure as will suffice to
show the connection of the invention therewith.
(c) Where the drawings in a nonprovisional application do not comply
with the requirements of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the
examiner shall require such additional illustration within a time period
of not less than two months from the date of the sending of a notice
thereof. Such corrections are subject to the requirements of
Sec. 1.81(d).
[31 FR 12923, Oct. 4, 1966, as amended at 43 FR 4015, Jan. 31, 1978; 60
FR 20226, Apr. 25, 1995]
Sec. 1.84 Standards for drawings.
(a) Drawings. There are two acceptable categories for presenting
drawings in utility and design patent applications.
(1) Black ink. Black and white drawings are normally required. India
ink, or its equivalent that secures solid black lines, must be used for
drawings; or
(2) Color. On rare occasions, color drawings may be necessary as the
only practical medium by which to disclose the subject matter sought to
be patented in a utility or design patent application or the subject
matter of a statutory invention registration. The color drawings must be
of sufficient quality such that all details in the drawings are
reproducible in black and white in the printed patent. Color drawings
are not permitted in international applications (see PCT Rule 11.13), or
in an application, or copy thereof, submitted under the Office
electronic filing system. The Office will accept color drawings in
utility or design patent applications and statutory invention
registrations only after granting a petition filed under this paragraph
explaining why the color drawings are necessary. Any such petition must
include the following:
(i) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h);
(ii) Three (3) sets of color drawings;
(iii) A black and white photocopy that accurately depicts, to the
extent possible, the subject matter shown in the color drawing; and
(iv) An amendment to the specification to insert (unless the
specification contains or has been previously amended to contain) the
following language as the first paragraph of the brief description of
the drawings:
The patent or application file contains at least one drawing
executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application
publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon
request and payment of the necessary fee.
(b) Photographs.--(1) Black and white. Photographs, including
photocopies of photographs, are not ordinarily permitted in utility and
design patent applications. The Office will accept photographs in
utility and design patent applications, however, if photographs are the
only practicable medium for illustrating the claimed invention. For
example, photographs or photomicrographs of: electrophoresis gels, blots
(e.g., immunological, western, Southern, and northern), autoradiographs,
cell cultures (stained and unstained), histological tissue cross
sections (stained and unstained), animals, plants, in vivo imaging, thin
layer chromatography plates, crystalline structures, and, in a design
patent application, ornamental effects, are acceptable. If the subject
matter of the application admits of illustration by a drawing, the
examiner may require a drawing in place of the photograph. The
photographs must be of sufficient quality so that all details in the
photographs are reproducible in the printed patent.
(2) Color photographs. Color photographs will be accepted in utility
and design patent applications if the conditions for accepting color
drawings and
[[Page 64]]
black and white photographs have been satisfied. See paragraphs (a)(2)
and (b)(1) of this section.
(c) Identification of drawings. Identifying indicia, if provided,
should include the title of the invention, inventor's name, and
application number, or docket number (if any) if an application number
has not been assigned to the application. If this information is
provided, it must be placed on the front of each sheet and centered
within the top margin.
(d) Graphic forms in drawings. Chemical or mathematical formulae,
tables, and waveforms may be submitted as drawings, and are subject to
the same requirements as drawings. Each chemical or mathematical formula
must be labeled as a separate figure, using brackets when necessary, to
show that information is properly integrated. Each group of waveforms
must be presented as a single figure, using a common vertical axis with
time extending along the horizontal axis. Each individual waveform
discussed in the specification must be identified with a separate letter
designation adjacent to the vertical axis.
(e) Type of paper. Drawings submitted to the Office must be made on
paper which is flexible, strong, white, smooth, non-shiny, and durable.
All sheets must be reasonably free from cracks, creases, and folds. Only
one side of the sheet may be used for the drawing. Each sheet must be
reasonably free from erasures and must be free from alterations,
overwritings, and interlineations. Photographs must be developed on
paper meeting the sheet-size requirements of paragraph (f) of this
section and the margin requirements of paragraph (g) of this section.
See paragraph (b) of this section for other requirements for
photographs.
(f) Size of paper. All drawing sheets in an application must be the
same size. One of the shorter sides of the sheet is regarded as its top.
The size of the sheets on which drawings are made must be:
(1) 21.0 cm. by 29.7 cm. (DIN size A4), or
(2) 21.6 cm. by 27.9 cm. (8\1/2\ by 11 inches).
(g) Margins. The sheets must not contain frames around the sight
(i.e., the usable surface), but should have scan target points (i.e.,
cross-hairs) printed on two catercorner margin corners. Each sheet must
include a top margin of at least 2.5 cm. (1 inch), a left side margin of
at least 2.5 cm. (1 inch), a right side margin of at least 1.5 cm. (\5/
8\ inch), and a bottom margin of at least 1.0 cm. (\3/8\ inch), thereby
leaving a sight no greater than 17.0 cm. by 26.2 cm. on 21.0 cm. by 29.7
cm. (DIN size A4) drawing sheets, and a sight no greater than 17.6 cm.
by 24.4 cm. (6\15/16\ by 9\5/8\ inches) on 21.6 cm. by 27.9 cm. (8\1/2\
by 11 inch) drawing sheets.
(h) Views. The drawing must contain as many views as necessary to
show the invention. The views may be plan, elevation, section, or
perspective views. Detail views of portions of elements, on a larger
scale if necessary, may also be used. All views of the drawing must be
grouped together and arranged on the sheet(s) without wasting space,
preferably in an upright position, clearly separated from one another,
and must not be included in the sheets containing the specifications,
claims, or abstract. Views must not be connected by projection lines and
must not contain center lines. Waveforms of electrical signals may be
connected by dashed lines to show the relative timing of the waveforms.
(1) Exploded views. Exploded views, with the separated parts
embraced by a bracket, to show the relationship or order of assembly of
various parts are permissible. When an exploded view is shown in a
figure which is on the same sheet as another figure, the exploded view
should be placed in brackets.
(2) Partial views. When necessary, a view of a large machine or
device in its entirety may be broken into partial views on a single
sheet, or extended over several sheets if there is no loss in facility
of understanding the view. Partial views drawn on separate sheets must
always be capable of being linked edge to edge so that no partial view
contains parts of another partial view. A smaller scale view should be
included showing the whole formed by the partial views and indicating
the positions of the parts shown. When a portion of a view is enlarged
for magnification purposes, the view and the enlarged view must each be
labeled as separate views.
[[Page 65]]
(i) Where views on two or more sheets form, in effect, a single
complete view, the views on the several sheets must be so arranged that
the complete figure can be assembled without concealing any part of any
of the views appearing on the various sheets.
(ii) A very long view may be divided into several parts placed one
above the other on a single sheet. However, the relationship between the
different parts must be clear and unambiguous.
(3) Sectional views. The plane upon which a sectional view is taken
should be indicated on the view from which the section is cut by a
broken line. The ends of the broken line should be designated by Arabic
or Roman numerals corresponding to the view number of the sectional
view, and should have arrows to indicate the direction of sight.
Hatching must be used to indicate section portions of an object, and
must be made by regularly spaced oblique parallel lines spaced
sufficiently apart to enable the lines to be distinguished without
difficulty. Hatching should not impede the clear reading of the
reference characters and lead lines. If it is not possible to place
reference characters outside the hatched area, the hatching may be
broken off wherever reference characters are inserted. Hatching must be
at a substantial angle to the surrounding axes or principal lines,
preferably 45 deg.. A cross section must be set out and drawn to show
all of the materials as they are shown in the view from which the cross
section was taken. The parts in cross section must show proper
material(s) by hatching with regularly spaced parallel oblique strokes,
the space between strokes being chosen on the basis of the total area to
be hatched. The various parts of a cross section of the same item should
be hatched in the same manner and should accurately and graphically
indicate the nature of the material(s) that is illustrated in cross
section. The hatching of juxtaposed different elements must be angled in
a different way. In the case of large areas, hatching may be confined to
an edging drawn around the entire inside of the outline of the area to
be hatched. Different types of hatching should have different
conventional meanings as regards the nature of a material seen in cross
section.
(4) Alternate position. A moved position may be shown by a broken
line superimposed upon a suitable view if this can be done without
crowding; otherwise, a separate view must be used for this purpose.
(5) Modified forms. Modified forms of construction must be shown in
separate views.
(i) Arrangement of views. One view must not be placed upon another
or within the outline of another. All views on the same sheet should
stand in the same direction and, if possible, stand so that they can be
read with the sheet held in an upright position. If views wider than the
width of the sheet are necessary for the clearest illustration of the
invention, the sheet may be turned on its side so that the top of the
sheet, with the appropriate top margin to be used as the heading space,
is on the right-hand side. Words must appear in a horizontal, left-to-
right fashion when the page is either upright or turned so that the top
becomes the right side, except for graphs utilizing standard scientific
convention to denote the axis of abscissas (of X) and the axis of
ordinates (of Y).
(j) Front page view. The drawing must contain as many views as
necessary to show the invention. One of the views should be suitable for
inclusion on the front page of the patent application publication and
patent as the illustration of the invention. Views must not be connected
by projection lines and must not contain center lines. Applicant may
suggest a single view (by figure number) for inclusion on the front page
of the patent application publication and patent.
(k) Scale. The scale to which a drawing is made must be large enough
to show the mechanism without crowding when the drawing is reduced in
size to two-thirds in reproduction. Indications such as ``actual size''
or ``scale \1/2\'' on the drawings are not permitted since these lose
their meaning with reproduction in a different format.
(l) Character of lines, numbers, and letters. All drawings must be
made by a process which will give them satisfactory reproduction
characteristics. Every line, number, and letter must be
[[Page 66]]
durable, clean, black (except for color drawings), sufficiently dense
and dark, and uniformly thick and well-defined. The weight of all lines
and letters must be heavy enough to permit adequate reproduction. This
requirement applies to all lines however fine, to shading, and to lines
representing cut surfaces in sectional views. Lines and strokes of
different thicknesses may be used in the same drawing where different
thicknesses have a different meaning.
(m) Shading. The use of shading in views is encouraged if it aids in
understanding the invention and if it does not reduce legibility.
Shading is used to indicate the surface or shape of spherical,
cylindrical, and conical elements of an object. Flat parts may also be
lightly shaded. Such shading is preferred in the case of parts shown in
perspective, but not for cross sections. See paragraph (h)(3) of this
section. Spaced lines for shading are preferred. These lines must be
thin, as few in number as practicable, and they must contrast with the
rest of the drawings. As a substitute for shading, heavy lines on the
shade side of objects can be used except where they superimpose on each
other or obscure reference characters. Light should come from the upper
left corner at an angle of 45 deg.. Surface delineations should
preferably be shown by proper shading. Solid black shading areas are not
permitted, except when used to represent bar graphs or color.
(n) Symbols. Graphical drawing symbols may be used for conventional
elements when appropriate. The elements for which such symbols and
labeled representations are used must be adequately identified in the
specification. Known devices should be illustrated by symbols which have
a universally recognized conventional meaning and are generally accepted
in the art. Other symbols which are not universally recognized may be
used, subject to approval by the Office, if they are not likely to be
confused with existing conventional symbols, and if they are readily
identifiable.
(o) Legends. Suitable descriptive legends may be used subject to
approval by the Office, or may be required by the examiner where
necessary for understanding of the drawing. They should contain as few
words as possible.
(p) Numbers, letters, and reference characters. (1) Reference
characters (numerals are preferred), sheet numbers, and view numbers
must be plain and legible, and must not be used in association with
brackets or inverted commas, or enclosed within outlines, e.g.,
encircled. They must be oriented in the same direction as the view so as
to avoid having to rotate the sheet. Reference characters should be
arranged to follow the profile of the object depicted.
(2) The English alphabet must be used for letters, except where
another alphabet is customarily used, such as the Greek alphabet to
indicate angles, wavelengths, and mathematical formulas.
(3) Numbers, letters, and reference characters must measure at least
.32 cm. (\1/8\ inch) in height. They should not be placed in the drawing
so as to interfere with its comprehension. Therefore, they should not
cross or mingle with the lines. They should not be placed upon hatched
or shaded surfaces. When necessary, such as indicating a surface or
cross section, a reference character may be underlined and a blank space
may be left in the hatching or shading where the character occurs so
that it appears distinct.
(4) The same part of an invention appearing in more than one view of
the drawing must always be designated by the same reference character,
and the same reference character must never be used to designate
different parts.
(5) Reference characters not mentioned in the description shall not
appear in the drawings. Reference characters mentioned in the
description must appear in the drawings.
(q) Lead lines. Lead lines are those lines between the reference
characters and the details referred to. Such lines may be straight or
curved and should be as short as possible. They must originate in the
immediate proximity of the reference character and extend to the feature
indicated. Lead lines must not cross each other. Lead lines are required
for each reference character except for those which indicate the surface
or cross section on which
[[Page 67]]
they are placed. Such a reference character must be underlined to make
it clear that a lead line has not been left out by mistake. Lead lines
must be executed in the same way as lines in the drawing. See paragraph
(l) of this section.
(r) Arrows. Arrows may be used at the ends of the lines, provided
that their meaning is clear, as follows:
(1) On a lead line, a freestanding arrow to indicate the entire
section towards which it points;
(2) On a lead line, an arrow touching a line to indicate the surface
shown by the line looking along the direction of the arrow; or
(3) To show the direction of movement.
(s) Copyright or Mask Work Notice. A copyright or mask work notice
may appear in the drawing, but must be placed within the sight of the
drawing immediately below the figure representing the copyright or mask
work material and be limited to letters having a print size of .32 cm.
to .64 cm. (1/8 to 1/4 inches) high. The content of the notice must be
limited to only those elements provided for by law. For example,
``[copy]1983 John Doe'' (17 U.S.C. 401) and ``*M* John Doe''
(17 U.S.C. 909) would be properly limited and, under current statutes,
legally sufficient notices of copyright and mask work, respectively.
Inclusion of a copyright or mask work notice will be permitted only if
the authorization language set forth in Sec. 1.71(e) is included at the
beginning (preferably as the first paragraph) of the specification.
(t) Numbering of sheets of drawings. The sheets of drawings should
be numbered in consecutive Arabic numerals, starting with 1, within the
sight as defined in paragraph (g) of this section. These numbers, if
present, must be placed in the middle of the top of the sheet, but not
in the margin. The numbers can be placed on the right-hand side if the
drawing extends too close to the middle of the top edge of the usable
surface. The drawing sheet numbering must be clear and larger than the
numbers used as reference characters to avoid confusion. The number of
each sheet should be shown by two Arabic numerals placed on either side
of an oblique line, with the first being the sheet number, and the
second being the total number of sheets of drawings, with no other
marking.
(u) Numbering of views. (1) The different views must be numbered in
consecutive Arabic numerals, starting with 1, independent of the
numbering of the sheets and, if possible, in the order in which they
appear on the drawing sheet(s). Partial views intended to form one
complete view, on one or several sheets, must be identified by the same
number followed by a capital letter. View numbers must be preceded by
the abbreviation ``FIG.'' Where only a single view is used in an
application to illustrate the claimed invention, it must not be numbered
and the abbreviation ``FIG.'' must not appear.
(2) Numbers and letters identifying the views must be simple and
clear and must not be used in association with brackets, circles, or
inverted commas. The view numbers must be larger than the numbers used
for reference characters.
(v) Security markings. Authorized security markings may be placed on
the drawings provided they are outside the sight, preferably centered in
the top margin.
(w) Corrections. Any corrections on drawings submitted to the Office
must be durable and permanent.
(x) Holes. No holes should be made by applicant in the drawing
sheets.
(y) Types of drawings. See Sec. 1.152 for design drawings,
Sec. 1.165 for plant drawings, and Sec. 1.174 for reissue drawings.
[58 FR 38723, July 20, 1993; 58 FR 45841, 45842, Aug. 31, 1993, as
amended at 61 FR 42804, Aug. 19, 1996; 62 FR 53190, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR
54669, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57055, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.85 Corrections to drawings.
(a) A utility or plant application will not be placed on the files
for examination until objections to the drawings have been corrected.
Except as provided in Sec. 1.215(c), any patent application publication
will not include drawings filed after the application has been placed on
the files for examination. Unless applicant is otherwise notified in an
Office action, objections to the drawings in a utility or plant
application will not be held in abeyance, and a request to hold
objections to the
[[Page 68]]
drawings in abeyance will not be considered a bona fide attempt to
advance the application to final action (Sec. 1.135(c)). If a drawing in
a design application meets the requirements of Sec. 1.84(e), (f), and
(g) and is suitable for reproduction, but is not otherwise in compliance
with Sec. 1.84, the drawing may be admitted for examination.
(b) The Office will not release drawings for purposes of correction.
If corrections are necessary, new corrected drawings must be submitted
within the time set by the Office.
(c) If a corrected drawing is required or if a drawing does not
comply with Sec. 1.84 at the time an application is allowed, the Office
may notify the applicant and set a three month period of time from the
mail date of the notice of allowability within which the applicant must
file a corrected or formal drawing in compliance with Sec. 1.84 to avoid
abandonment. This time period is not extendable under Sec. 1.136(a) or
Sec. 1.136(b).
[65 FR 54670, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57055, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.88 [Reserved]
Models, Exhibits, Specimens
Authority: Secs. 1.91 to 1.95 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 114.
Sec. 1.91 Models or exhibits not generally admitted as part of application or patent.
(a) A model or exhibit will not be admitted as part of the record of
an application unless it:
(1) Substantially conforms to the requirements of Sec. 1.52 or
Sec. 1.84;
(2) Is specifically required by the Office; or
(3) Is filed with a petition under this section including:
(i) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h); and
(ii) An explanation of why entry of the model or exhibit in the file
record is necessary to demonstrate patentability.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section,
a model, working model, or other physical exhibit may be required by the
Office if deemed necessary for any purpose in examination of the
application.
[62 FR 53190, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54670, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.92 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.93 Specimens.
When the invention relates to a composition of matter, the applicant
may be required to furnish specimens of the composition, or of its
ingredients or intermediates, for the purpose of inspection or
experiment.
Sec. 1.94 Return of models, exhibits or specimens.
Models, exhibits, or specimens in applications which have become
abandoned, and also in other applications on conclusion of the
prosecution, may be returned to the applicant upon demand and at his
expense, unless it be deemed necessary that they be preserved in the
Office. Such physical exhibits in contested cases may be returned to the
parties at their expense. If not claimed within a reasonable time, they
may be disposed of at the discretion of the Commissioner.
Sec. 1.95 Copies of exhibits.
Copies of models or other physical exhibits will not ordinarily be
furnished by the Office, and any model or exhibit in an application or
patent shall not be taken from the Office except in the custody of an
employee of the Office specially authorized by the Commissioner.
Sec. 1.96 Submission of computer program listings.
(a) General. Descriptions of the operation and general content of
computer program listings should appear in the description portion of
the specification. A computer program listing for the purpose of this
section is defined as a printout that lists in appropriate sequence the
instructions, routines, and other contents of a program for a computer.
The program listing may be either in machine or machine-independent
(object or source) language which will cause a computer to perform a
desired procedure or task such as solve a problem, regulate the flow of
[[Page 69]]
work in a computer, or control or monitor events. Computer program
listings may be submitted in patent applications as set forth in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b) Material which will be printed in the patent: If the computer
program listing is contained in 300 lines or fewer, with each line of 72
characters or fewer, it may be submitted either as drawings or as part
of the specification.
(1) Drawings. If the listing is submitted as drawings, it must be
submitted in the manner and complying with the requirements for drawings
as provided in Sec. 1.84. At least one figure numeral is required on
each sheet of drawing.
(2) Specification. (i) If the listing is submitted as part of the
specification, it must be submitted in accordance with the provisions of
Sec. 1.52.
(ii) Any listing having more than 60 lines of code that is submitted
as part of the specification must be positioned at the end of the
description but before the claims. Any amendment must be made by way of
submission of a substitute sheet.
(c) As an appendix which will not be printed: Any computer program
listing may, and any computer program listing having over 300 lines (up
to 72 characters per line) must, be submitted on a compact disc in
compliance with Sec. 1.52(e). A compact disc containing such a computer
program listing is to be referred to as a ``computer program listing
appendix.'' The ``computer program listing appendix'' will not be part
of the printed patent. The specification must include a reference to the
``computer program listing appendix'' at the location indicated in
Sec. 1.77(b)(4).
(1) Multiple computer program listings for a single application may
be placed on a single compact disc. Multiple compact discs may be
submitted for a single application if necessary. A separate compact disc
is required for each application containing a computer program listing
that must be submitted on a ``computer program listing appendix.''
(2) The ``computer program listing appendix'' must be submitted on a
compact disc that complies with Sec. 1.52(e) and the following
specifications (no other format shall be allowed):
(i) Computer Compatibility: IBM PC/XT/AT, or compatibles, or Apple
Macintosh;
(ii) Operating System Compatibility: MS-DOS, MS-Windows, Unix, or
Macintosh;
(iii) Line Terminator: ASCII Carriage Return plus ASCII Line Feed;
(iv) Control Codes: the data must not be dependent on control
characters or codes which are not defined in the ASCII character set;
and
(v) Compression: uncompressed data.
[61 FR 42804, Aug. 19, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 54670, Sept. 8, 2000]
Information Disclosure Statement
Sec. 1.97 Filing of information disclosure statement.
(a) In order for an applicant for a patent or for a reissue of a
patent to have an information disclosure statement in compliance with
Sec. 1.98 considered by the Office during the pendency of the
application, the information disclosure statement must satisfy one of
paragraphs (b), (c), or (d) of this section.
(b) An information disclosure statement shall be considered by the
Office if filed by the applicant within any one of the following time
periods:
(1) Within three months of the filing date of a national application
other than a continued prosecution application under Sec. 1.53(d);
(2) Within three months of the date of entry of the national stage
as set forth in Sec. 1.491 in an international application;
(3) Before the mailing of a first Office action on the merits; or
(4) Before the mailing of a first Office action after the filing of
a request for continued examination under Sec. 1.114.
(c) An information disclosure statement shall be considered by the
Office if filed after the period specified in paragraph (b) of this
section, provided that the information disclosure statement is filed
before the mailing date of any of a final action under Sec. 1.113, a
notice of allowance under Sec. 1.311, or an action that otherwise closes
prosecution in the application, and it is accompanied by one of:
(1) The statement specified in paragraph (e) of this section; or
(2) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(p).
[[Page 70]]
(d) An information disclosure statement shall be considered by the
Office if filed by the applicant after the period specified in paragraph
(c) of this section, provided that the information disclosure statement
is filed on or before payment of the issue fee and is accompanied by:
(1) The statement specified in paragraph (e) of this section; and
(2) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(p).
(e) A statement under this section must state either:
(1) That each item of information contained in the information
disclosure statement was first cited in any communication from a foreign
patent office in a counterpart foreign application not more than three
months prior to the filing of the information disclosure statement; or
(2) That no item of information contained in the information
disclosure statement was cited in a communication from a foreign patent
office in a counterpart foreign application, and, to the knowledge of
the person signing the certification after making reasonable inquiry, no
item of information contained in the information disclosure statement
was known to any individual designated in Sec. 1.56(c) more than three
months prior to the filing of the information disclosure statement.
(f) No extensions of time for filing an information disclosure
statement are permitted under Sec. 1.136. If a bona fide attempt is made
to comply with Sec. 1.98, but part of the required content is
inadvertently omitted, additional time may be given to enable full
compliance.
(g) An information disclosure statement filed in accordance with
this section shall not be construed as a representation that a search
has been made.
(h) The filing of an information disclosure statement shall not be
construed to be an admission that the information cited in the statement
is, or is considered to be, material to patentability as defined in
Sec. 1.56(b).
(i) If an information disclosure statement does not comply with
either this section or Sec. 1.98, it will be placed in the file but will
not be considered by the Office.
[57 FR 2034, Jan. 17, 1992, as amended at 59 FR 32658, June 24, 1994; 60
FR 20226, Apr. 25, 1995; 61 FR 42805, Aug. 19, 1996; 62 FR 53190, Oct.
10, 1997; 65 FR 14872, Mar. 20, 2000; 65 FR 54670, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.98 Content of information disclosure statement.
(a) Any information disclosure statement filed under Sec. 1.97 shall
include:
(1) A list of all patents, publications, applications, or other
information submitted for consideration by the Office;
(2) A legible copy of:
(i) Each U.S. patent application publication and U.S. and foreign
patent;
(ii) Each publication or that portion which caused it to be listed;
(iii) For each cited pending U.S. application, the application
specification including the claims, and any drawing of the application,
or that portion of the application which caused it to be listed
including any claims directed to that portion; and
(iv) All other information or that portion which caused it to be
listed; and
(3)(i) A concise explanation of the relevance, as it is presently
understood by the individual designated in Sec. 1.56(c) most
knowledgeable about the content of the information, of each patent,
publication, or other information listed that is not in the English
language. The concise explanation may be either separate from
applicant's specification or incorporated therein.
(ii) A copy of the translation if a written English-language
translation of a non-English-language document, or portion thereof, is
within the possession, custody, or control of, or is readily available
to any individual designated in Sec. 1.56(c).
(b)(1) Each U.S. patent listed in an information disclosure
statement must be identified by inventor, patent number, and issue date.
(2) Each U.S. patent application publication listed in an
information disclosure statement shall be identified by applicant,
patent application publication number, and publication date.
(3) Each U.S. application listed in an information disclosure
statement must
[[Page 71]]
be identified by the inventor, application number, and filing date.
(4) Each foreign patent or published foreign patent application
listed in an information disclosure statement must be identified by the
country or patent office which issued the patent or published the
application, an appropriate document number, and the publication date
indicated on the patent or published application.
(5) Each publication listed in an information disclosure statement
must be identified by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages
of the publication, date, and place of publication.
(c) When the disclosures of two or more patents or publications
listed in an information disclosure statement are substantively
cumulative, a copy of one of the patents or publications may be
submitted without copies of the other patents or publications, provided
that it is stated that these other patents or publications are
cumulative.
(d) A copy of any patent, publication, pending U.S. application or
other information, as specified in paragraph (a) of this section, listed
in an information disclosure statement is required to be provided, even
if the patent, publication, pending U.S. application or other
information was previously submitted to, or cited by, the Office in an
earlier application, unless:
(1) The earlier application is properly identified in the
information disclosure statement and is relied on for an earlier
effective filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120; and
(2) The information disclosure statement submitted in the earlier
application complies with paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section.
[65 FR 54671, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57055, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.99 Third-party submission in published application.
(a) A submission by a member of the public of patents or
publications relevant to a pending published application may be entered
in the application file if the submission complies with the requirements
of this section and the application is still pending when the submission
and application file are brought before the examiner.
(b) A submission under this section must identify the application to
which it is directed by application number and include:
(1) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(p);
(2) A list of the patents or publications submitted for
consideration by the Office, including the date of publication of each
patent or publication;
(3) A copy of each listed patent or publication in written form or
at least the pertinent portions; and
(4) An English language translation of all the necessary and
pertinent parts of any non-English language patent or publication in
written form relied upon.
(c) The submission under this section must be served upon the
applicant in accordance with Sec. 1.248.
(d) A submission under this section shall not include any
explanation of the patents or publications, or any other information.
The Office will dispose of such explanation or information if included
in a submission under this section. A submission under this section is
also limited to ten total patents or publications.
(e) A submission under this section must be filed within two months
from the date of publication of the application (Sec. 1.215(a)) or prior
to the mailing of a notice of allowance (Sec. 1.311), whichever is
earlier. Any submission under this section not filed within this period
is permitted only when the patents or publications could not have been
submitted to the Office earlier, and must also be accompanied by the
processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i). A submission by a member of
the public to a pending published application that does not comply with
the requirements of this section will be returned or discarded.
(f) A member of the public may include a self-addressed postcard
with a submission to receive an acknowledgment by the Office that the
submission has been received. A member of the public filing a submission
under this section will not receive any communications from the Office
relating to the submission other than the return of a self-addressed
postcard. In the absence of a request by the Office, an applicant has no
duty to, and need not,
[[Page 72]]
reply to a submission under this section.
[65 FR 57056, Sept. 20, 2000; 65 FR 66502, Nov. 6, 2000]
Examination of Applications
Authority: Secs. 1.101 to 1.108 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 131,
132.
Sec. 1.101 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.102 Advancement of examination.
(a) Applications will not be advanced out of turn for examination or
for further action except as provided by this part, or upon order of the
Commissioner to expedite the business of the Office, or upon filing of a
request under paragraph (b) of this section or upon filing a petition
under paragraphs (c) or (d) of this section with a showing which, in the
opinion of the Commissioner, will justify so advancing it.
(b) Applications wherein the inventions are deemed of peculiar
importance to some branch of the public service and the head of some
department of the Government requests immediate action for that reason,
may be advanced for examination.
(c) A petition to make an application special may be filed without a
fee if the basis for the petition is the applicant's age or health or
that the invention will materially enhance the quality of the
environment or materially contribute to the development or conservation
of energy resources.
(d) A petition to make an application special on grounds other than
those referred to in paragraph (c) of this section must be accompanied
by the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h).
(36 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 47 FR 41276, Sept. 17, 1982;
54 FR 6903, Feb. 15, 1989; 60 FR 20226, Apr. 25, 1995; 62 FR 53191, Oct.
10, 1997; 65 FR 54671, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.103 Suspension of action by the Office.
(a) Suspension for cause. On request of the applicant, the Office
may grant a suspension of action by the Office under this paragraph for
good and sufficient cause. The Office will not suspend action if a reply
by applicant to an Office action is outstanding. Any petition for
suspension of action under this paragraph must specify a period of
suspension not exceeding six months. Any petition for suspension of
action under this paragraph must also include:
(1) A showing of good and sufficient cause for suspension of action;
and
(2) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h), unless such cause is the
fault of the Office.
(b) Limited suspension of action in a continued prosecution
application (CPA) filed under Sec. 1.53(d). On request of the applicant,
the Office may grant a suspension of action by the Office under this
paragraph in a continued prosecution application filed under
Sec. 1.53(d) for a period not exceeding three months. Any request for
suspension of action under this paragraph must be filed with the request
for an application filed under Sec. 1.53(d), specify the period of
suspension, and include the processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i).
(c) Limited suspension of action after a request for continued
examination (RCE) under Sec. 1.114. On request of the applicant, the
Office may grant a suspension of action by the Office under this
paragraph after the filing of a request for continued examination in
compliance with Sec. 1.114 for a period not exceeding three months. Any
request for suspension of action under this paragraph must be filed with
the request for continued examination under Sec. 1.114, specify the
period of suspension, and include the processing fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(i).
(d) Deferral of examination. On request of the applicant, the Office
may grant a deferral of examination under the conditions specified in
this paragraph for a period not extending beyond three years from the
earliest filing date for which a benefit is claimed under title 35,
United States Code. A request for deferral of examination under this
paragraph must include the publication fee set forth in Sec. 1.18(d) and
the processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i). A request for deferral of
examination under this paragraph will not be granted unless:
(1) The application is an original utility or plant application
filed under Sec. 1.53(b) or resulting from entry of an international
application into the national stage after compliance with Sec. 1.495;
[[Page 73]]
(2) The applicant has not filed a nonpublication request under
Sec. 1.213(a), or has filed a request under Sec. 1.213(b) to rescind a
previously filed nonpublication request;
(3) The application is in condition for publication as provided in
Sec. 1.211(c); and
(4) The Office has not issued either an Office action under 35
U.S.C. 132 or a notice of allowance under 35 U.S.C. 151.
(e) Notice of suspension on initiative of the Office. The Office
will notify applicant if the Office suspends action by the Office on an
application on its own initiative.
(f) Suspension of action for public safety or defense. The Office
may suspend action by the Office by order of the Commissioner if the
following conditions are met:
(1) The application is owned by the United States;
(2) Publication of the invention may be detrimental to the public
safety or defense; and
(3) The appropriate department or agency requests such suspension.
(g) Statutory invention registration. The Office will suspend action
by the Office for the entire pendency of an application if the Office
has accepted a request to publish a statutory invention registration in
the application, except for purposes relating to patent interference
proceedings under Subpart E of this part.
[65 FR 50104, Aug. 16, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57056, Sept. 20, 2000;
67 FR 523, Jan. 4, 2002]
Sec. 1.104 Nature of examination.
(a) Examiner's action. (1) On taking up an application for
examination or a patent in a reexamination proceeding, the examiner
shall make a thorough study thereof and shall make a thorough
investigation of the available prior art relating to the subject matter
of the claimed invention. The examination shall be complete with respect
both to compliance of the application or patent under reexamination with
the applicable statutes and rules and to the patentability of the
invention as claimed, as well as with respect to matters of form, unless
otherwise indicated.
(2) The applicant, or in the case of a reexamination proceeding,
both the patent owner and the requester, will be notified of the
examiner's action. The reasons for any adverse action or any objection
or requirement will be stated in an Office action and such information
or references will be given as may be useful in aiding the applicant, or
in the case of a reexamination proceeding the patent owner, to judge the
propriety of continuing the prosecution.
(3) An international-type search will be made in all national
applications filed on and after June 1, 1978.
(4) Any national application may also have an international-type
search report prepared thereon at the time of the national examination
on the merits, upon specific written request therefor and payment of the
international-type search report fee set forth in Sec. 1.21(e). The
Patent and Trademark Office does not require that a formal report of an
international-type search be prepared in order to obtain a search fee
refund in a later filed international application.
(b) Completeness of examiner's action. The examiner's action will be
complete as to all matters, except that in appropriate circumstances,
such as misjoinder of invention, fundamental defects in the application,
and the like, the action of the examiner may be limited to such matters
before further action is made. However, matters of form need not be
raised by the examiner until a claim is found allowable.
(c) Rejection of claims. (1) If the invention is not considered
patentable, or not considered patentable as claimed, the claims, or
those considered unpatentable will be rejected.
(2) In rejecting claims for want of novelty or for obviousness, the
examiner must cite the best references at his or her command. When a
reference is complex or shows or describes inventions other than that
claimed by the applicant, the particular part relied on must be
designated as nearly as practicable. The pertinence of each reference,
if not apparent, must be clearly explained and each rejected claim
specified.
(3) In rejecting claims the examiner may rely upon admissions by the
applicant, or the patent owner in a reexamination proceeding, as to any
matter affecting patentability and, insofar as
[[Page 74]]
rejections in applications are concerned, may also rely upon facts
within his or her knowledge pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this
section.
(4) Subject matter which is developed by another person which
qualifies as prior art only under 35 U.S.C. 102(e), (f) or (g) may be
used as prior art under 35 U.S.C. 103 against a claimed invention unless
the entire rights to the subject matter and the claimed invention were
commonly owned by the same person or organization or subject to an
obligation of assignment to the same person or organization at the time
the claimed invention was made.
(5) The claims in any original application naming an inventor will
be rejected as being precluded by a waiver in a published statutory
invention registration naming that inventor if the same subject matter
is claimed in the application and the statutory invention registration.
The claims in any reissue application naming an inventor will be
rejected as being precluded by a waiver in a published statutory
invention registration naming that inventor if the reissue application
seeks to claim subject matter:
(i) Which was not covered by claims issued in the patent prior to
the date of publication of the statutory invention registration; and
(ii) Which was the same subject matter waived in the statutory
invention registration.
(d) Citation of references. (1) If domestic patents are cited by the
examiner, their numbers and dates, and the names of the patentees will
be stated. If domestic patent application publications are cited by the
examiner, their publication number, publication date, and the names of
the applicants will be stated. If foreign published applications or
patents are cited, their nationality or country, numbers and dates, and
the names of the patentees will be stated, and such other data will be
furnished as may be necessary to enable the applicant, or in the case of
a reexamination proceeding, the patent owner, to identify the published
applications or patents cited. In citing foreign published applications
or patents, in case only a part of the document is involved, the
particular pages and sheets containing the parts relied upon will be
identified. If printed publications are cited, the author (if any),
title, date, pages or plates, and place of publication, or place where a
copy can be found, will be given.
(2) When a rejection in an application is based on facts within the
personal knowledge of an employee of the Office, the data shall be as
specific as possible, and the reference must be supported, when called
for by the applicant, by the affidavit of such employee, and such
affidavit shall be subject to contradiction or explanation by the
affidavits of the applicant and other persons.
(e) Reasons for allowance. If the examiner believes that the record
of the prosecution as a whole does not make clear his or her reasons for
allowing a claim or claims, the examiner may set forth such reasoning.
The reasons shall be incorporated into an Office action rejecting other
claims of the application or patent under reexamination or be the
subject of a separate communication to the applicant or patent owner.
The applicant or patent owner may file a statement commenting on the
reasons for allowance within such time as may be specified by the
examiner. Failure by the examiner to respond to any statement commenting
on reasons for allowance does not give rise to any implication.
[62 FR 53191, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 14872, Mar. 20, 2000;
65 FR 54671, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57056, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.105 Requirements for information.
(a)(1) In the course of examining or treating a matter in a pending
or abandoned application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111 or 371 (including a
reissue application), in a patent, or in a reexamination proceeding, the
examiner or other Office employee may require the submission, from
individuals identified under Sec. 1.56(c), or any assignee, of such
information as may be reasonably necessary to properly examine or treat
the matter, for example:
(i) Commercial databases: The existence of any particularly relevant
commercial database known to any of the inventors that could be searched
for a particular aspect of the invention.
[[Page 75]]
(ii) Search: Whether a search of the prior art was made, and if so,
what was searched.
(iii) Related information: A copy of any non-patent literature,
published application, or patent (U.S. or foreign), by any of the
inventors, that relates to the claimed invention.
(iv) Information used to draft application: A copy of any non-patent
literature, published application, or patent (U.S. or foreign) that was
used to draft the application.
(v) Information used in invention process: A copy of any non-patent
literature, published application, or patent (U.S. or foreign) that was
used in the invention process, such as by designing around or providing
a solution to accomplish an invention result.
(vi) Improvements: Where the claimed invention is an improvement,
identification of what is being improved.
(vii) In use: Identification of any use of the claimed invention
known to any of the inventors at the time the application was filed
notwithstanding the date of the use.
(2) Where an assignee has asserted its right to prosecute pursuant
to Sec. 3.71(a) of this chapter, matters such as paragraphs (a)(1)(i),
(iii), and (vii) of this section may also be applied to such assignee.
(3) Any reply that states that the information required to be
submitted is unknown and/or is not readily available to the party or
parties from which it was requested will be accepted as a complete
reply.
(b) The requirement for information of paragraph (a)(1) of this
section may be included in an Office action, or sent separately.
(c) A reply, or a failure to reply, to a requirement for information
under this section will be governed by Secs. 1.135 and 1.136.
[65 FR 54671, Sept. 8, 2000]
Secs. 1.106-1.109 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.110 Inventorship and date of invention of the subject matter of individual claims.
When more than one inventor is named in an application or patent,
the Patent and Trademark Office, when necessary for purposes of an
Office proceeding, may require an applicant, patentee, or owner to
identify the inventive entity of the subject matter of each claim in the
application or patent. Where appropriate, the invention dates of the
subject matter of each claim and the ownership of the subject matter on
the date of invention may be required of the applicant, patentee or
owner. See also Secs. 1.78(c) and 1.130.
[61 FR 42805, Aug. 19, 1996]
Action by Applicant and Further Consideration
Authority: Secs. 1.111 to 1.113 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 132.
Sec. 1.111 Reply by applicant or patent owner to a non-final Office action.
(a)(1) If the Office action after the first examination (Sec. 1.104)
is adverse in any respect, the applicant or patent owner, if he or she
persists in his or her application for a patent or reexamination
proceeding, must reply and request reconsideration or further
examination, with or without amendment. See Secs. 1.135 and 1.136 for
time for reply to avoid abandonment.
(2) A second (or subsequent) supplemental reply will be entered
unless disapproved by the Commissioner. A second (or subsequent)
supplemental reply may be disapproved if the second (or subsequent)
supplemental reply unduly interferes with an Office action being
prepared in response to the previous reply. Factors that will be
considered in disapproving a second (or subsequent) supplemental reply
include:
(i) The state of preparation of an Office action responsive to the
previous reply as of the date of receipt (Sec. 1.6) of the second (or
subsequent) supplemental reply by the Office; and
(ii) The nature of any changes to the specification or claims that
would result from entry of the second (or subsequent) supplemental
reply.
(b) In order to be entitled to reconsideration or further
examination, the applicant or patent owner must reply to the Office
action. The reply by the applicant or patent owner must be reduced to a
writing which distinctly and specifically points out the supposed errors
in the examiner's action and must reply to every ground of objection and
[[Page 76]]
rejection in the prior Office action. The reply must present arguments
pointing out the specific distinctions believed to render the claims,
including any newly presented claims, patentable over any applied
references. If the reply is with respect to an application, a request
may be made that objections or requirements as to form not necessary to
further consideration of the claims be held in abeyance until allowable
subject matter is indicated. The applicant's or patent owner's reply
must appear throughout to be a bona fide attempt to advance the
application or the reexamination proceeding to final action. A general
allegation that the claims define a patentable invention without
specifically pointing out how the language of the claims patentably
distinguishes them from the references does not comply with the
requirements of this section.
(c) In amending in reply to a rejection of claims in an application
or patent under reexamination, the applicant or patent owner must
clearly point out the patentable novelty which he or she thinks the
claims present in view of the state of the art disclosed by the
references cited or the objections made. The applicant or patent owner
must also show how the amendments avoid such references or objections.
[46 FR 29182, May 29, 1981, as amended at 62 FR 53192, Oct. 10, 1997; 65
FR 54672, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.112 Reconsideration before final action.
After reply by applicant or patent owner (Sec. 1.111 or Sec. 1.945)
to a non-final action and any comments by an inter partes reexamination
requester (Sec. 1.947), the application or the patent under
reexamination will be reconsidered and again examined. The applicant, or
in the case of a reexamination proceeding the patent owner and any third
party requester, will be notified if claims are rejected, objections or
requirements made, or decisions favorable to patentability are made, in
the same manner as after the first examination (Sec. 1.104). Applicant
or patent owner may reply to such Office action in the same manner
provided in Sec. 1.111 or Sec. 1.945, with or without amendment, unless
such Office action indicates that it is made final (Sec. 1.113) or an
appeal (Sec. 1.191) has been taken (Sec. 1.116), or in an inter partes
reexamination, that it is an action closing prosecution (Sec. 1.949) or
a right of appeal notice (Sec. 1.953).
[65 FR 76773, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.113 Final rejection or action.
(a) On the second or any subsequent examination or consideration by
the examiner the rejection or other action may be made final, whereupon
applicant's, or for ex parte reexaminations filed under Sec. 1.510,
patent owner's reply is limited to appeal in the case of rejection of
any claim (Sec. 1.191), or to amendment as specified in Sec. 1.114 or
Sec. 1.116. Petition may be taken to the Commissioner in the case of
objections or requirements not involved in the rejection of any claim
(Sec. 1.181). Reply to a final rejection or action must comply with
Sec. 1.114 or paragraph (c) of this section. For final actions in an
inter partes reexamination filed under Sec. 1.913, see Sec. 1.953.
(b) In making such final rejection, the examiner shall repeat or
state all grounds of rejection then considered applicable to the claims
in the application, clearly stating the reasons in support thereof.
(c) Reply to a final rejection or action must include cancellation
of, or appeal from the rejection of, each rejected claim. If any claim
stands allowed, the reply to a final rejection or action must comply
with any requirements or objections as to form.
[65 FR 14872, Mar. 20, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 76773, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 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 Sec. 1.17(e) prior to the earliest of:
(1) Payment of the issue fee, unless a petition under Sec. 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
[[Page 77]]
35 U.S.C. 145 or 146, unless the appeal or civil action is terminated.
(b) Prosecution in an application is closed as used in this section
means that the application is under appeal, or that the last Office
action is a final action (Sec. 1.113), a notice of allowance
(Sec. 1.311), or an action that otherwise closes prosecution in the
application.
(c) A submission as used in this section includes, but is not
limited to, an information disclosure statement, an amendment to the
written description, claims, or drawings, new arguments, or new evidence
in support of patentability. If reply to an Office action under 35
U.S.C. 132 is outstanding, the submission must meet the reply
requirements of Sec. 1.111.
(d) If an applicant timely files a submission and fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(e), the Office will withdraw the finality of any Office action
and the submission will be entered and considered. If an applicant files
a request for continued examination under this section after appeal, but
prior to a decision on the appeal, it will be treated as a request to
withdraw the appeal and to reopen prosecution of the application before
the examiner. An appeal brief under Sec. 1.192 or a reply brief under
Sec. 1.193(b), or related papers, will not be considered a submission
under this section.
(e) The provisions of this section do not apply to:
(1) A provisional application;
(2) An application for a utility or plant patent filed under 35
U.S.C. 111(a) before June 8, 1995;
(3) An international application filed under 35 U.S.C. 363 before
June 8, 1995;
(4) An application for a design patent; or
(5) A patent under reexamination.
[65 FR 50104, Aug. 16, 2000]
Amendments
Authority: Secs. 1.115 to 1.127 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 132.
Sec. 1.115 Preliminary amendments.
(a) A preliminary amendment is an amendment that is received in the
Office (Sec. 1.6) on or before the mail date of the first Office action
under Sec. 1.104.
(b)(1) A preliminary amendment will be entered unless disapproved by
the Commissioner. A preliminary amendment may be disapproved if the
preliminary amendment unduly interferes with the preparation of a first
Office action in an application. Factors that will be considered in
disapproving a preliminary amendment include:
(i) The state of preparation of a first Office action as of the date
of receipt (Sec. 1.6) of the preliminary amendment by the Office; and
(ii) The nature of any changes to the specification or claims that
would result from entry of the preliminary amendment.
(2) A preliminary amendment will not be disapproved if it is filed
no later than:
(i) Three months from the filing date of an application under
Sec. 1.53(b);
(ii) The filing date of a continued prosecution application under
Sec. 1.53(d); or
(iii) Three months from the date the national stage is entered as
set forth in Sec. 1.491 in an international application.
(c) The time periods specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section
are not extendable.
[65 FR 54672, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.116 Amendments after final action or appeal
(a) An amendment after final action or appeal must comply with
Sec. 1.114 or this section.
(b) After a final rejection or other final action (Sec. 1.113) in an
application or in an ex parte reexamination filed under Sec. 1.510, or
an action closing prosecution (Sec. 1.949) in an inter partes
reexamination filed under Sec. 1.913, amendments may be made canceling
claims or complying with any requirement of form expressly set forth in
a previous Office action. Amendments presenting rejected claims in
better form for consideration on appeal may be admitted. The admission
of, or refusal to admit, any amendment after a final rejection, a final
action, an action closing prosecution, or any related proceedings will
not operate to relieve the application or patent under reexamination
from its condition as subject to appeal or to save the application from
abandonment under Sec. 1.135, or the reexamination from termination. No
amendment
[[Page 78]]
can be made in an inter partes reexamination proceeding after the right
of appeal notice under Sec. 1.953 except as provided for in paragraph
(d) of this section.
(c) If amendments touching the merits of the application or patent
under reexamination are presented after final rejection, or after appeal
has been taken, or when such amendment might not otherwise be proper,
they may be admitted upon a showing of good and sufficient reasons why
they are necessary and were not earlier presented.
(d) No amendment can be made as a matter of right in appealed cases.
After decision on appeal, amendments can only be made as provided in
Secs. 1.198 and 1.981, or to carry into effect a recommendation under
Sec. 1.196 or Sec. 1.977.
[65 FR 14873, Mar. 20, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 76773, Dec. 7, 2000]
Secs. 1.117-1.119 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.121 Manner of making amendments in applications.
(a) Amendments in applications, other than reissue applications.
Amendments in applications, other than reissue applications, are made by
filing a paper, in compliance with Sec. 1.52, directing that specified
amendments be made.
(b) Specification other than the claims and listings provided for
elsewhere (Secs. 1.96 and 1.825)--(1) Amendment by instruction to
delete, replace, or add a paragraph. Amendments to the specification,
other than the claims and listings provided for elsewhere (Secs. 1.96
and 1.825), may be made by submitting:
(i) An instruction, which unambiguously identifies the location, to
delete one or more paragraphs of the specification, replace a deleted
paragraph with one or more replacement paragraphs, or add one or more
paragraphs;
(ii) Any replacement or added paragraph(s) in clean form, that is,
without markings to indicate the changes that have been made; and
(iii) Another version of any replacement paragraph(s), on one or
more pages separate from the amendment, marked up to show all the
changes relative to the previous version of the paragraph(s). The
changes may be shown by brackets (for deleted matter) or underlining
(for added matter), or by any equivalent marking system. A marked up
version does not have to be supplied for an added paragraph or a deleted
paragraph as it is sufficient to state that a particular paragraph has
been added, or deleted.
(2) Amendment by replacement section. If the sections of the
specification contain section headings as provided in Secs. 1.77(b),
1.154(b), or Sec. 1.163(c), amendments to the specification, other than
the claims, may be made by submitting:
(i) A reference to the section heading along with an instruction to
delete that section of the specification and to replace such deleted
section with a replacement section;
(ii) A replacement section in clean form, that is, without markings
to indicate the changes that have been made; and
(iii) Another version of the replacement section, on one or more
pages separate from the amendment, marked up to show all changes
relative to the previous version of the section. The changes may be
shown by brackets (for deleted matter) or underlining (for added
matter), or by any equivalent marking system.
(3) Amendment by substitute specification. The specification, other
than the claims, may also be amended by submitting:
(i) An instruction to replace the specification;
(ii) A substitute specification in compliance with Sec. 1.125(b);
and
(iii) Another version of the substitute specification, separate from
the substitute specification, marked up to show all changes relative to
the previous version of the specification. The changes may be shown by
brackets (for deleted matter), or underlining (for added matter), or by
any equivalent marking system.
(4) Reinstatement: Deleted matter may be reinstated only by a
subsequent amendment presenting the previously deleted matter.
(c) Claims--(1) Amendment by rewriting, directions to cancel or add:
Amendments to a claim must be made by rewriting such claim with all
changes (e.g., additions, deletions, modifications) included. The
rewriting of a claim (with the same number) will be
[[Page 79]]
construed as directing the cancellation of the previous version of that
claim. A claim may also be canceled by an instruction.
(i) A rewritten or newly added claim must be in clean form, that is,
without markings to indicate the changes that have been made. A
parenthetical expression should follow the claim number indicating the
status of the claim as amended or newly added (e.g., ``amended,''
``twice amended,'' or ``new'').
(ii) If a claim is amended by rewriting such claim with the same
number, the amendment must be accompanied by another version of the
rewritten claim, on one or more pages separate from the amendment,
marked up to show all the changes relative to the previous version of
that claim. A parenthetical expression should follow the claim number
indicating the status of the claim, e.g., ``amended,'' ``twice
amended,'' etc. The parenthetical expression ``amended,'' ``twice
amended,'' etc. should be the same for both the clean version of the
claim under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section and the marked up
version under this paragraph. The changes may be shown by brackets (for
deleted matter) or underlining (for added matter), or by any equivalent
marking system. A marked up version does not have to be supplied for an
added claim or a canceled claim as it is sufficient to state that a
particular claim has been added, or canceled.
(2) A claim canceled by amendment (deleted in its entirety) may be
reinstated only by a subsequent amendment presenting the claim as a new
claim with a new claim number.
(3) A clean version of the entire set of pending claims may be
submitted in a single amendment paper. Such a submission shall be
construed as directing the cancellation of all previous versions of any
pending claims. A marked up version is required only for claims being
changed by the current amendment (see paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this
section). Any claim not accompanied by a marked up version will
constitute an assertion that it has not been changed relative to the
immediate prior version.
(d) Drawings. Application drawings are amended in the following
manner: Any change to the application drawings must be submitted on a
separate paper showing the proposed changes in red for approval by the
examiner. Upon approval by the examiner, new drawings in compliance with
Sec. 1.84 including the changes must be filed.
(e) Disclosure consistency. The disclosure must be amended, when
required by the Office, to correct inaccuracies of description and
definition, and to secure substantial correspondence between the claims,
the remainder of the specification, and the drawings.
(f) No new matter. No amendment may introduce new matter into the
disclosure of an application.
(g) Exception for examiner's amendments: Changes to the
specification, including the claims, of an application made by the
Office in an examiner's amendment may be made by specific instructions
to insert or delete subject matter set forth in the examiner's amendment
by identifying the precise point in the specification or the claim(s)
where the insertion or deletion is to be made. Compliance with
paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2) or (c)(1) of this section is not required.
(h) Amendments in reissue applications. Any amendment to the
description and claims in reissue applications must be made in
accordance with Sec. 1.173.
(i) Amendments in reexamination proceedings: Any proposed amendment
to the description and claims in patents involved in reexamination
proceedings in both ex parte reexaminations filed under Sec. 1.510 and
inter partes reexaminations filed under Sec. 1.913 must be made in
accordance with Sec. 1.530(d)-(j).
(j) Amendments in provisional applications: Amendments in
provisional applications are not normally made. If an amendment is made
to a provisional application, however, it must comply with the
provisions of this section. Any amendments to a provisional application
shall be placed in the provisional application file but may not be
entered.
[65 FR 54672, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 76773, Dec. 7, 2000]
[[Page 80]]
Secs. 1.122-1.24 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.125 Substitute specification.
(a) If the number or nature of the amendments or the legibility of
the application papers renders it difficult to consider the application,
or to arrange the papers for printing or copying, the Office may require
the entire specification, including the claims, or any part thereof, be
rewritten.
(b) A substitute specification, excluding the claims, may be filed
at any point up to payment of the issue fee if it is accompanied by:
(1) A statement that the substitute specification includes no new
matter; and
(2) A marked up version of the substitute specification showing all
the changes (including the matter being added to and the matter being
deleted from) to the specification of record. Numbering the paragraphs
of the specification of record is not considered a change that must be
shown pursuant to this paragraph.
(c) A substitute specification submitted under this section must be
submitted in clean form without markings as to amended material. The
paragraphs of any substitute specification, other than the claims,
should be individually numbered in Arabic numerals so that any amendment
to the specification may be made by replacement paragraph in accordance
with Sec. 1.121(b)(1).
(d) A substitute specification under this section is not permitted
in a reissue application or in a reexamination proceeding.
[62 FR 53193, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54673, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.126 Numbering of claims.
The original numbering of the claims must be preserved throughout
the prosecution. When claims are canceled the remaining claims must not
be renumbered. When claims are added, they must be numbered by the
applicant consecutively beginning with the number next following the
highest numbered claim previously presented (whether entered or not).
When the application is ready for allowance, the examiner, if necessary,
will renumber the claims consecutively in the order in which they appear
or in such order as may have been requested by applicant.
[62 FR 53194, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.127 Petition from refusal to admit amendment.
From the refusal of the primary examiner to admit an amendment, in
whole or in part, a petition will lie to the Commissioner under
Sec. 1.181.
Transitional Provisions
Sec. 1.129 Transitional procedures for limited examination after final rejection and restriction practice.
(a) An applicant in an application, other than for reissue or a
design patent, that has been pending for at least two years as of June
8, 1995, taking into account any reference made in such application to
any earlier filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 and 365(c), is
entitled to have a first submission entered and considered on the merits
after final rejection under the following circumstances: The Office will
consider such a submission, if the first submission and the fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(r) are filed prior to the filing of an appeal brief
and prior to abandonment of the application. The finality of the final
rejection is automatically withdrawn upon the timely filing of the
submission and payment of the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(r). If a
subsequent final rejection is made in the application, applicant is
entitled to have a second submission entered and considered on the
merits after the subsequent final rejection under the following
circumstances: The Office will consider such a submission, if the second
submission and a second fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(r) are filed prior to
the filing of an appeal brief and prior to abandonment of the
application. The finality of the subsequent final rejection is
automatically withdrawn upon the timely filing of the submission and
payment of the second fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(r). Any submission
filed after a final rejection made in an application subsequent to the
fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(r) having been twice paid will be treated as
set forth in Sec. 1.116. A submission as used in this paragraph
includes, but is not limited
[[Page 81]]
to, an information disclosure statement, an amendment to the written
description, claims or drawings and a new substantive argument or new
evidence in support of patentability.
(b)(1) In an application, other than for reissue or a design patent,
that has been pending for at least three years as of June 8, 1995;
taking into account any reference made in the application to any earlier
filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, and 365(c), no requirement
for restriction or for the filing of divisional applications shall be
made or maintained in the application after June 8, 1995, except where:
(i) The requirement was first made in the application or any earlier
filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 and 365(c) prior to April 8,
1995;
(ii) The examiner has not made a requirement for restriction in the
present or parent application prior to April 8, 1995, due to actions by
the applicant; or
(iii) The required fee for examination of each additional invention
was not paid.
(2) If the application contains more than one independent and
distinct invention and a requirement for restriction or for the filing
of divisional applications cannot be made or maintained pursuant to this
paragraph, applicant will be so notified and given a time period to:
(i) Elect the invention or inventions to be searched and examined,
if no election has been made prior to the notice, and pay the fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(s) for each independent and distinct invention
claimed in the application in excess of one which applicant elects;
(ii) Confirm an election made prior to the notice and pay the fee
set forth in Sec. 1.17(s) for each independent and distinct invention
claimed in the application in addition to the one invention which
applicant previously elected; or
(iii) File a petition under this section traversing the requirement.
If the required petition is filed in a timely manner, the original time
period for electing and paying the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(s) will be
deferred and any decision on the petition affirming or modifying the
requirement will set a new time period to elect the invention or
inventions to be searched and examined and to pay the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(s) for each independent and distinct invention claimed in the
application in excess of one which applicant elects.
(3) The additional inventions for which the required fee has not
been paid will be withdrawn from consideration under Sec. 1.142(b). An
applicant who desires examination of an invention so withdrawn from
consideration can file a divisional application under 35 U.S.C. 121.
(c) The provisions of this section shall not be applicable to any
application filed after June 8, 1995.
[60 FR 20226, Apr. 25, 1995]
Affidavits Overcoming Rejections
Sec. 1.130 Affidavit or declaration to disqualify commonly owned patent or published application as prior art.
(a) When any claim of an application or a patent under reexamination
is rejected under 35 U.S.C. 103 on a U.S. patent or U.S. patent
application publication which is not prior art under 35 U.S.C. 102(b),
and the inventions defined by the claims in the application or patent
under reexamination and by the claims in the patent or published
application are not identical but are not patentably distinct, and the
inventions are owned by the same party, the applicant or owner of the
patent under reexamination may disqualify the patent or patent
application publication as prior art. The patent or patent application
publication can be disqualified as prior art by submission of:
(1) A terminal disclaimer in accordance with Sec. 1.321(c); and
(2) An oath or declaration stating that the application or patent
under reexamination and patent or published application are currently
owned by the same party, and that the inventor named in the application
or patent under reexamination is the prior inventor under 35 U.S.C. 104.
(b) When an application or a patent under reexamination claims an
invention which is not patentably distinct from an invention claimed in
a commonly owned patent with the same or a different inventive entity, a
double patenting rejection will be made in the
[[Page 82]]
application or a patent under reexamination. A judicially created double
patenting rejection may be obviated by filing a terminal disclaimer in
accordance with Sec. 1.321(c).
[61 FR 42805, Aug. 19, 1996, as amended at 65 FR 57056, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.131 Affidavit or declaration of prior invention.
(a) When any claim of an application or a patent under reexamination
is rejected, the inventor of the subject matter of the rejected claim,
the owner of the patent under reexamination, or the party qualified
under Secs. 1.42, 1.43, or 1.47, may submit an appropriate oath or
declaration to establish invention of the subject matter of the rejected
claim prior to the effective date of the reference or activity on which
the rejection is based. The effective date of a U.S. patent, U.S. patent
application publication, or international application publication under
PCT Article 21(2) is the earlier of its publication date or date that it
is effective as a reference under 35 U.S.C. 102(e). Prior invention may
not be established under this section in any country other than the
United States, a NAFTA country, or a WTO member country. Prior invention
may not be established under this section before December 8, 1993, in a
NAFTA country other than the United States, or before January 1, 1996,
in a WTO member country other than a NAFTA country. Prior invention may
not be established under this section if either:
(1) The rejection is based upon a U.S. patent or U.S. patent
application publication of a pending or patented application to another
or others which claims the same patentable invention as defined in
Sec. 1.601(n); or
(2) The rejection is based upon a statutory bar.
(b) The showing of facts shall be such, in character and weight, as
to establish reduction to practice prior to the effective date of the
reference, or conception of the invention prior to the effective date of
the reference coupled with due diligence from prior to said date to a
subsequent reduction to practice or to the filing of the application.
Original exhibits of drawings or records, or photocopies thereof, must
accompany and form part of the affidavit or declaration of their absence
satisfactorily explained.
[53 FR 23734, June 23, 1988, as amended at 60 FR 21044, May 1, 1995; 61
FR 42806, Aug. 19, 1996; 65 FR 54673, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 57057, Sept.
20, 2000]
Sec. 1.132 Affidavits or declarations traversing rejections or objections.
When any claim of an application or a patent under reexamination is
rejected or objected to, any evidence submitted to traverse the
rejection or objection on a basis not otherwise provided for must be by
way of an oath or declaration under this section.
[65 FR 57057, Sept. 20, 2000]
Interviews
Sec. 1.133 Interviews.
(a)(1) Interviews with examiners concerning applications and other
matters pending before the Office must be conducted on Office premises
and within Office hours, as the respective examiners may designate.
Interviews will not be permitted at any other time or place without the
authority of the Commissioner.
(2) An interview for the discussion of the patentability of a
pending application will not occur before the first Office action,
unless the application is a continuing or substitute application.
(3) The examiner may require that an interview be scheduled in
advance.
(b) In every instance where reconsideration is requested in view of
an interview with an examiner, a complete written statement of the
reasons presented at the interview as warranting favorable action must
be filed by the applicant. An interview does not remove the necessity
for reply to Office actions as specified in Secs. 1.111 and 1.135.
(35 U.S.C. 132)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 62 FR 53194, Oct. 10, 1997;
65 FR 54674, Sept. 8, 2000]
Time for Reply by Applicant; Abandonment of Application
Authority: Secs. 1.135 to 1.138 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 133.
[[Page 83]]
Sec. 1.134 Time period for reply to an Office action.
An Office action will notify the applicant of any non-statutory or
shortened statutory time period set for reply to an Office action.
Unless the applicant is notified in writing that a reply is required in
less than six months, a maximum period of six months is allowed.
[62 FR 53194, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.135 Abandonment for failure to reply within time period.
(a) If an applicant of a patent application fails to reply within
the time period provided under Sec. 1.134 and Sec. 1.136, the
application will become abandoned unless an Office action indicates
otherwise.
(b) Prosecution of an application to save it from abandonment
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section must include such complete and
proper reply as the condition of the application may require. The
admission of, or refusal to admit, any amendment after final rejection
or any amendment not responsive to the last action, or any related
proceedings, will not operate to save the application from abandonment.
(c) When reply by the applicant is a bona fide attempt to advance
the application to final action, and is substantially a complete reply
to the non-final Office action, but consideration of some matter or
compliance with some requirement has been inadvertently omitted,
applicant may be given a new time period for reply under Sec. 1.134 to
supply the omission.
[62 FR 53194, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.136 Extensions of time.
(a)(1) If an applicant is required to reply within a nonstatutory or
shortened statutory time period, applicant may extend the time period
for reply up to the earlier of the expiration of any maximum period set
by statute or five months after the time period set for reply, if a
petition for an extension of time and the fee set in Sec. 1.17(a) are
filed, unless:
(i) Applicant is notified otherwise in an Office action;
(ii) The reply is a reply brief submitted pursuant to Sec. 1.193(b);
(iii) The reply is a request for an oral hearing submitted pursuant
to Sec. 1.194(b);
(iv) The reply is to a decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences pursuant to Sec. 1.196, Sec. 1.197 or Sec. 1.304; or
(v) The application is involved in an interference declared pursuant
to Sec. 1.611.
(2) The date on which the petition and the fee have been filed is
the date for purposes of determining the period of extension and the
corresponding amount of the fee. The expiration of the time period is
determined by the amount of the fee paid. A reply must be filed prior to
the expiration of the period of extension to avoid abandonment of the
application (Sec. 1.135), but in no situation may an applicant reply
later than the maximum time period set by statute, or be granted an
extension of time under paragraph (b) of this section when the
provisions of this paragraph are available. See Sec. 1.136(b) for
extensions of time relating to proceedings pursuant to Secs. 1.193(b),
1.194, 1.196 or 1.197; Sec. 1.304 for extensions of time to appeal to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or to commence a civil
action; Sec. 1.550(c) for extensions of time in ex parte reexamination
proceedings; Sec. 1.956 for extensions of time in inter partes
reexamination proceedings; and Sec. 1.645 for extensions of time in
interference proceedings.
(3) A written request may be submitted in an application that is an
authorization to treat any concurrent or future reply, requiring a
petition for an extension of time under this paragraph for its timely
submission, as incorporating a petition for extension of time for the
appropriate length of time. An authorization to charge all required
fees, fees under Sec. 1.17, or all required extension of time fees will
be treated as a constructive petition for an extension of time in any
concurrent or future reply requiring a petition for an extension of time
under this paragraph for its timely submission. Submission of the fee
set forth in Sec. 1.17(a) will also be treated as a constructive
petition for an extension of time in any concurrent reply requiring a
petition for an extension of time under this paragraph for its timely
submission.
[[Page 84]]
(b) When a reply cannot be filed within the time period set for such
reply and the provisions of paragraph (a) of this section are not
available, the period for reply will be extended only for sufficient
cause and for a reasonable time specified. Any request for an extension
of time under this paragraph must be filed on or before the day on which
such reply is due, but the mere filing of such a request will not affect
any extension under this paragraph. In no situation can any extension
carry the date on which reply is due beyond the maximum time period set
by statute. See Sec. 1.304 for extensions of time to appeal to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or to commence a civil action;
Sec. 1.645 for extensions of time in interference proceedings;
Sec. 1.550(c) for extensions of time in ex parte reexamination
proceedings; and Sec. 1.956 for extensions of time in inter partes
reexamination proceedings.
(c) If an applicant is notified in a ``Notice of Allowability'' that
an application is otherwise in condition for allowance, the following
time periods are not extendable if set in the ``Notice of Allowability''
or in an Office action having a mail date on or after the mail date of
the ``Notice of Allowability'':
(1) The period for submitting an oath or declaration in compliance
with Sec. 1.63;
(2) The period for submitting formal drawings set under
Sec. 1.85(c); and
(3) The period for making a deposit set under Sec. 1.809(c).
[62 FR 53194, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54674, Sept. 8, 2000;
65 FR 76773, Dec. 7, 2000; 66 FR 21092, Apr. 27, 2001]
Sec. 1.137 Revival of abandoned application, terminated reexamination proceeding, or lapsed patent.
(a) Unavoidable. If the delay in reply by applicant or patent owner
was unavoidable, a petition may be filed pursuant to this paragraph to
revive an abandoned application, a reexamination proceeding terminated
under Secs. 1.550(d) or 1.957(b) or (c), or a lapsed patent. A grantable
petition pursuant to this paragraph must be accompanied by:
(1) The reply required to the outstanding Office action or notice,
unless previously filed;
(2) The petition fee as set forth in Sec. 1.17(l);
(3) A showing to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that the
entire delay in filing the required reply from the due date for the
reply until the filing of a grantable petition pursuant to this
paragraph was unavoidable; and
(4) Any terminal disclaimer (and fee as set forth in Sec. 1.20(d))
required pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section.
(b) Unintentional. If the delay in reply by applicant or patent
owner was unintentional, a petition may be filed pursuant to this
paragraph to revive an abandoned application, a reexamination proceeding
terminated under Secs. 1.550(d) or 1.957(b) or (c), or a lapsed patent.
A grantable petition pursuant to this paragraph must be accompanied by:
(1) The reply required to the outstanding Office action or notice,
unless previously filed;
(2) The petition fee as set forth in Sec. 1.17(m);
(3) A statement that the entire delay in filing the required reply
from the due date for the reply until the filing of a grantable petition
pursuant to this paragraph was unintentional. The Commissioner may
require additional information where there is a question whether the
delay was unintentional; and
(4) Any terminal disclaimer (and fee as set forth in Sec. 1.20(d))
required pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section.
(c) Reply. In a nonprovisional application abandoned for failure to
prosecute, the required reply may be met by the filing of a continuing
application. In a nonprovisional utility or plant application filed on
or after June 8, 1995, and abandoned for failure to prosecute, the
required reply may also be met by the filing of a request for continued
examination in compliance with Sec. 1.114. In an application or patent,
abandoned or lapsed for failure to pay the issue fee or any portion
thereof, the required reply must include payment of the issue fee or any
outstanding balance. In an application, abandoned for failure to pay the
publication fee, the required reply must include payment of the
publication fee.
(d) Terminal disclaimer. (1) Any petition to revive pursuant to this
section
[[Page 85]]
in a design application must be accompanied by a terminal disclaimer and
fee as set forth in Sec. 1.321 dedicating to the public a terminal part
of the term of any patent granted thereon equivalent to the period of
abandonment of the application. Any petition to revive pursuant to this
section in either a utility or plant application filed before June 8,
1995, must be accompanied by a terminal disclaimer and fee as set forth
in Sec. 1.321 dedicating to the public a terminal part of the term of
any patent granted thereon equivalent to the lesser of:
(i) The period of abandonment of the application; or
(ii) The period extending beyond twenty years from the date on which
the application for the patent was filed in the United States or, if the
application contains a specific reference to an earlier filed
application(s) under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121, or 365(c), from the date on
which the earliest such application was filed.
(2) Any terminal disclaimer pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) of this
section must also apply to any patent granted on a continuing utility or
plant application filed before June 8, 1995, or a continuing design
application, that contains a specific reference under 35 U.S.C. 120,
121, or 365(c) to the application for which revival is sought.
(3) The provisions of paragraph (d)(1) of this section do not apply
to applications for which revival is sought solely for purposes of
copendency with a utility or plant application filed on or after June 8,
1995, to lapsed patents, or to reexamination proceedings.
(e) Request for reconsideration. Any request for reconsideration or
review of a decision refusing to revive an abandoned application, a
terminated reexamination proceeding, or lapsed patent upon petition
filed pursuant to this section, to be considered timely, must be filed
within two months of the decision refusing to revive or within such time
as set in the decision. Unless a decision indicates otherwise, this time
period may be extended under:
(1) The provisions of Sec. 1.136 for an abandoned application or
lapsed patent;
(2) The provisions of Sec. 1.550(c) for a terminated ex parte
reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.510; or
(3) The provisions of Sec. 1.956 for a terminated inter partes
reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.913.
(f) Abandonment for failure to notify the Office of a foreign
filing: A nonprovisional application abandoned pursuant to 35 U.S.C.
122(b)(2)(B)(iii) for failure to timely notify the Office of the filing
of an application in a foreign country or under a multinational treaty
that requires publication of applications eighteen months after filing,
may be revived only pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section. The reply
requirement of paragraph (c) of this section is met by the notification
of such filing in a foreign country or under a multinational treaty, but
the filing of a petition under this section will not operate to stay any
period for reply that may be running against the application.
(g) Provisional applications. A provisional application, abandoned
for failure to timely respond to an Office requirement, may be revived
pursuant to this section. Subject to the provisions of 35 U.S.C.
119(e)(3) and Sec. 1.7(b), a provisional application will not be
regarded as pending after twelve months from its filing date under any
circumstances.
[65 FR 57057, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.138 Express abandonment.
(a) An application may be expressly abandoned by filing a written
declaration of abandonment identifying the application in the United
States Patent and Trademark Office. Express abandonment of the
application may not be recognized by the Office before the date of issue
or publication unless it is actually received by appropriate officials
in time to act.
(b) A written declaration of abandonment must be signed by a party
authorized under Sec. 1.33(b)(1), (b)(3), or (b)(4) to sign a paper in
the application, except as otherwise provided in this paragraph. A
registered attorney or agent, not of record, who acts in a
representative capacity under the provisions of Sec. 1.34(a) when filing
a continuing application, may expressly abandon the prior application as
of the
[[Page 86]]
filing date granted to the continuing application.
(c) An applicant seeking to abandon an application to avoid
publication of the application (see Sec. 1.211(a)(1)) must submit a
declaration of express abandonment by way of a petition under this
section including the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h) in sufficient time
to permit the appropriate officials to recognize the abandonment and
remove the application from the publication process. Applicant should
expect that the petition will not be granted and the application will be
published in regular course unless such declaration of express
abandonment and petition are received by the appropriate officials more
than four weeks prior to the projected date of publication.
[65 FR 54674, Sept. 8, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 57058, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.139 [Reserved]
Joinder of Inventions in One Application; Restriction
Authority: Secs. 1.141 to 1.147 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 121.
Sec. 1.141 Different inventions in one national application.
(a) Two or more independent and distinct inventions may not be
claimed in one national application, except that more than one species
of an invention, not to exceed a reasonable number, may be specifically
claimed in different claims in one national application, provided the
application also includes an allowable claim generic to all the claimed
species and all the claims to species in excess of one are written in
dependent form (Sec. 1.75) or otherwise include all the limitations of
the generic claim.
(b) Where claims to all three categories, product, process of
making, and process of use, are included in a national application, a
three way requirement for restriction can only be made where the process
of making is distinct from the product. If the process of making and the
product are not distinct, the process of using may be joined with the
claims directed to the product and the process of making the product
even though a showing of distinctness between the product and process of
using the product can be made.
[52 FR 20046, May 28, 1987]
Sec. 1.142 Requirement for restriction.
(a) If two or more independent and distinct inventions are claimed
in a single application, the examiner in an Office action will require
the applicant in the reply to that action to elect an invention to which
the claims will be restricted, this official action being called a
requirement for restriction (also known as a requirement for division).
Such requirement will normally be made before any action on the merits;
however, it may be made at any time before final action.
(b) Claims to the invention or inventions not elected, if not
canceled, are nevertheless withdrawn from further consideration by the
examiner by the election, subject however to reinstatement in the event
the requirement for restriction is withdrawn or overruled.
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 62 FR 53195, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.143 Reconsideration of requirement.
If the applicant disagrees with the requirement for restriction, he
may request reconsideration and withdrawal or modification of the
requirement, giving the reasons therefor. (See Sec. 1.111.) In
requesting reconsideration the applicant must indicate a provisional
election of one invention for prosecution, which invention shall be the
one elected in the event the requirement becomes final The requirement
for restriction will be reconsidered on such a request. If the
requirement is repeated and made final the examiner will at the same
time act on the claims to the invention elected.
Sec. 1.144 Petition from requirement for restriction.
After a final requirement for restriction, the applicant, in
addition to making any reply due on the remainder of the action, may
petition the Commissioner to review the requirement. Petition may be
deferred until after final action on or allowance of claims to the
invention elected, but must be filed not
[[Page 87]]
later than appeal. A petition will not be considered if reconsideration
of the requirement was not requested (see Sec. 1.181).
[62 FR 53195, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.145 Subsequent presentation of claims for different invention.
If, after an office action on an application, the applicant presents
claims directed to an invention distinct from and independent of the
invention previously claimed, the applicant will be required to restrict
the claims to the invention previously claimed if the amendment is
entered, subject to reconsideration and review as provided in
Secs. 1.143 and 1.144.
Sec. 1.146 Election of species.
In the first action on an application containing a generic claim to
a generic invention (genus) and claims to more than one patentably
distinct species embraced thereby, the examiner may require the
applicant in the reply to that action to elect a species of his or her
invention to which his or her claim will be restricted if no claim to
the genus is found to be allowable. However, if such application
contains claims directed to more than a reasonable number of species,
the examiner may require restriction of the claims to not more than a
reasonable number of species before taking further action in the
application.
[62 FR 53195, Oct. 10, 1997]
Design Patents
Sec. 1.151 Rules applicable.
The rules relating to applications for patents for other inventions
or discoveries are also applicable to applications for patents for
designs except as otherwise provided.
(35 U.S.C. 171)
Sec. 1.152 Design drawings.
The design must be represented by a drawing that complies with the
requirements of Sec. 1.84 and must contain a sufficient number of views
to constitute a complete disclosure of the appearance of the design.
Appropriate and adequate surface shading should be used to show the
character or contour of the surfaces represented. Solid black surface
shading is not permitted except when used to represent the color black
as well as color contrast. Broken lines may be used to show visible
environmental structure, but may not be used to show hidden planes and
surfaces that cannot be seen through opaque materials. Alternate
positions of a design component, illustrated by full and broken lines in
the same view are not permitted in a design drawing. Photographs and ink
drawings are not permitted to be combined as formal drawings in one
application. Photographs submitted in lieu of ink drawings in design
patent applications must not disclose environmental structure but must
be limited to the design claimed for the article.
[65 FR 54674, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.153 Title, description and claim, oath or declaration.
(a) The title of the design must designate the particular article.
No description, other than a reference to the drawing, is ordinarily
required. The claim shall be in formal terms to the ornamental design
for the article (specifying name) as shown, or as shown and described.
More than one claim is neither required nor permitted.
(b) The oath or declaration required of the applicant must comply
with Sec. 1.63.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 29 FR 18503, Dec. 29, 1964;
48 FR 2712, Jan. 20, 1983]
Sec. 1.154 Arrangement of application elements in a design application.
(a) The elements of the design application, if applicable, should
appear in the following order:
(1) Design application transmittal form.
(2) Fee transmittal form.
(3) Application data sheet (see Sec. 1.76).
(4) Specification.
(5) Drawings or photographs.
(6) Executed oath or declaration (see Sec. 1.153(b)).
(b) The specification should include the following sections in
order:
[[Page 88]]
(1) Preamble, stating the name of the applicant, title of the
design, and a brief description of the nature and intended use of the
article in which the design is embodied.
(2) Cross-reference to related applications (unless included in the
application data sheet).
(3) Statement regarding federally sponsored research or development.
(4) Description of the figure or figures of the drawing.
(5) Feature description.
(6) A single claim.
(c) The text of the specification sections defined in paragraph (b)
of this section, if applicable, should be preceded by a section heading
in uppercase letters without underlining or bold type.
[65 FR 54674, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.155 Expedited examination of design applications.
(a) The applicant may request that the Office expedite the
examination of a design application. To qualify for expedited
examination:
(1) The application must include drawings in compliance with
Sec. 1.84;
(2) The applicant must have conducted a preexamination search; and
(3) The applicant must file a request for expedited examination
including:
(i) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(k); and
(ii) A statement that a preexamination search was conducted. The
statement must also indicate the field of search and include an
information disclosure statement in compliance with Sec. 1.98.
(b) The Office will not examine an application that is not in
condition for examination (e.g., missing basic filing fee) even if the
applicant files a request for expedited examination under this section.
[65 FR 54674, Sept. 8, 2000]
Plant Patents
Sec. 1.161 Rules applicable.
The rules relating to applications for patent for other inventions
or discoveries are also applicable to applications for patents for
plants except as otherwise provided.
Sec. 1.162 Applicant, oath or declaration.
The applicant for a plant patent must be the person who has invented
or discovered and asexually reproduced the new and distinct variety of
plant for which a patent is sought (or as provided in Secs. 1.42, 1.43,
and 1.47). The oath or declaration required of the applicant, in
addition to the averments required by Sec. 1.63, must state that he or
she has asexually reproduced the plant. Where the plant is a newly found
plant the oath or declaration must also state that it was found in a
cultivated area.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2713, Jan. 20, 1983]
Sec. 1.163 Specification and arrangement of application elements in a plant application.
(a) The specification must contain as full and complete a disclosure
as possible of the plant and the characteristics thereof that
distinguish the same over related known varieties, and its antecedents,
and must particularly point out where and in what manner the variety of
plant has been asexually reproduced. For a newly found plant, the
specification must particularly point out the location and character of
the area where the plant was discovered.
(b) The elements of the plant application, if applicable, should
appear in the following order:
(1) Plant application transmittal form.
(2) Fee transmittal form.
(3) Application data sheet (see Sec. 1.76).
(4) Specification.
(5) Drawings (in duplicate).
(6) Executed oath or declaration (Sec. 1.162).
(c) The specification should include the following sections in
order:
(1) Title of the invention, which may include an introductory
portion stating the name, citizenship, and residence of the applicant.
(2) Cross-reference to related applications (unless included in the
application data sheet).
(3) Statement regarding federally sponsored research or development.
(4) Latin name of the genus and species of the plant claimed.
(5) Variety denomination.
[[Page 89]]
(6) Background of the invention.
(7) Brief summary of the invention.
(8) Brief description of the drawing.
(9) Detailed botanical description.
(10) A single claim.
(11) Abstract of the disclosure.
(d) The text of the specification or sections defined in paragraph
(c) of this section, if applicable, should be preceded by a section
heading in upper case, without underlining or bold type.
[65 FR 54675, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.164 Claim.
The claim shall be in formal terms to the new and distinct variety
of the specified plant as described and illustrated, and may also recite
the principal distinguishing characteristics. More than one claim is not
permitted.
(35 U.S.C. 162)
Sec. 1.165 Plant drawings.
(a) Plant patent drawings should be artistically and competently
executed and must comply with the requirements of Sec. 1.84. View
numbers and reference characters need not be employed unless required by
the examiner. The drawing must disclose all the distinctive
characteristics of the plant capable of visual representation.
(b) The drawings may be in color. The drawing must be in color if
color is a distinguishing characteristic of the new variety. Two copies
of color drawings or photographs and a black and white photocopy that
accurately depicts, to the extent possible, the subject matter shown in
the color drawing or photograph must be submitted.
[58 FR 38726, July 20, 1993, as amended at 65 FR 57058, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.166 Specimens.
The applicant may be required to furnish specimens of the plant, or
its flower or fruit, in a quantity and at a time in its stage of growth
as may be designated, for study and inspection. Such specimens, properly
packed, must be forwarded in conformity with instructions furnished to
the applicant. When it is not possible to forward such specimens, plants
must be made available for official inspection where grown.
(35 U.S.C. 114, 161)
Sec. 1.167 Examination.
Applications may be submitted by the Patent and Trademark Office to
the Department of Agriculture for study and report.
[62 FR 53196, Oct. 10, 1997]
Reissues
Authority: Secs. 1.171 to 1.179 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 251.
Sec. 1.171 Application for reissue.
An application for reissue must contain the same parts required for
an application for an original patent, complying with all the rules
relating thereto except as otherwise provided, and in addition, must
comply with the requirements of the rules relating to reissue
applications.
[62 FR 53196, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.172 Applicants, assignees.
(a) A reissue oath must be signed and sworn to or declaration made
by the inventor or inventors except as otherwise provided (see
Secs. 1.42, 1.43, 1.47), and must be accompanied by the written consent
of all assignees, if any, owning an undivided interest in the patent,
but a reissue oath may be made and sworn to or declaration made by the
assignee of the entire interest if the application does not seek to
enlarge the scope of the claims of the original patent. All assignees
consenting to the reissue must establish their ownership interest in the
patent by filing in the reissue application a submission in accordance
with the provisions of Sec. 3.73(b) of this chapter.
(b) A reissue will be granted to the original patentee, his legal
representatives or assigns as the interest may appear.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 48 FR 2713, Jan. 20, 1983; 62
FR 53196, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.173 Reissue specification, drawings, and amendments.
(a) Contents of a reissue application. An application for reissue
must contain the entire specification, including the claims, and the
drawings of the
[[Page 90]]
patent. No new matter shall be introduced into the application. No
reissue patent shall be granted enlarging the scope of the claims of the
original patent unless applied for within two years from the grant of
the original patent, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 251.
(1) Specification, including claims. The entire specification,
including the claims, of the patent for which reissue is requested must
be furnished in the form of a copy of the printed patent, in double
column format, each page on only one side of a single sheet of paper. If
an amendment of the reissue application is to be included, it must be
made pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section. The formal requirements
for papers making up the reissue application other than those set forth
in this section are set out in Sec. 1.52. Additionally, a copy of any
disclaimer (Sec. 1.321), certificate of correction (Secs. 1.322 through
1.324), or reexamination certificate (Sec. 1.570) issued in the patent
must be included. (See also Sec. 1.178).
(2) Drawings. Applicant must submit a clean copy of each drawing
sheet of the printed patent at the time the reissue application is
filed. If such copy complies with Sec. 1.84, no further drawings will be
required. Where a drawing of the reissue application is to include any
changes relative to the patent being reissued, the changes to the
drawing must be made in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this
section. The Office will not transfer the drawings from the patent file
to the reissue application.
(b) Making amendments in a reissue application. An amendment in a
reissue application is made either by physically incorporating the
changes into the specification when the application is filed, or by a
separate amendment paper. If amendment is made by incorporation,
markings pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section must be used. If
amendment is made by an amendment paper, the paper must direct that
specified changes be made.
(1) Specification other than the claims. Changes to the
specification, other than to the claims, must be made by submission of
the entire text of an added or rewritten paragraph, including markings
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section, except that an entire
paragraph may be deleted by a statement deleting the paragraph without
presentation of the text of the paragraph. The precise point in the
specification must be identified where any added or rewritten paragraph
is located. This paragraph applies whether the amendment is submitted on
paper or compact disc (see Secs. 1.52(e)(1) and 1.821(c), but not for
discs submitted under Sec. 1.821(e)).
(2) Claims. An amendment paper must include the entire text of each
claim being changed by such amendment paper and of each claim being
added by such amendment paper. For any claim changed by the amendment
paper, a parenthetical expression ``amended,'' ``twice amended,'' etc.,
should follow the claim number. Each changed patent claim and each added
claim must include markings pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section,
except that a patent claim or added claim should be canceled by a
statement canceling the claim without presentation of the text of the
claim.
(3) Drawings. Any change to the patent drawings must be submitted as
a sketch on a separate paper showing the proposed changes in red for
approval by the examiner. Upon approval by the examiner, new drawings in
compliance with Sec. 1.84 including the approved changes must be filed.
Amended figures must be identified as ``Amended,'' and any added figure
must be identified as ``New.'' In the event that a figure is canceled,
the figure must be surrounded by brackets and identified as
``Canceled.''
(c) Status of claims and support for claim changes. Whenever there
is an amendment to the claims pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section,
there must also be supplied, on pages separate from the pages containing
the changes, the status (i.e., pending or canceled), as of the date of
the amendment, of all patent claims and of all added claims, and an
explanation of the support in the disclosure of the patent for the
changes made to the claims.
(d) Changes shown by markings. Any changes relative to the patent
being reissued which are made to the specification, including the
claims, upon filing,
[[Page 91]]
or by an amendment paper in the reissue application, must include the
following markings:
(1) The matter to be omitted by reissue must be enclosed in
brackets; and
(2) The matter to be added by reissue must be underlined, except for
amendments submitted on compact discs (Secs. 1.96 and 1.821(c)). Matter
added by reissue on compact discs must be preceded with
``'' and end with ``'' to properly identify
the material being added.
(e) Numbering of patent claims preserved. Patent claims may not be
renumbered. The numbering of any claim added in the reissue application
must follow the number of the highest numbered patent claim.
(f) Amendment of disclosure may be required. The disclosure must be
amended, when required by the Office, to correct inaccuracies of
description and definition, and to secure substantial correspondence
between the claims, the remainder of the specification, and the
drawings.
(g) Amendments made relative to the patent. All amendments must be
made relative to the patent specification, including the claims, and
drawings, which are in effect as of the date of filing of the reissue
application.
[65 FR 54675, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.174 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.175 Reissue oath or declaration.
(a) The reissue oath or declaration in addition to complying with
the requirements of Sec. 1.63, must also state that:
(1) The applicant believes the original patent to be wholly or
partly inoperative or invalid by reason of a defective specification or
drawing, or by reason of the patentee claiming more or less than the
patentee had the right to claim in the patent, stating at least one
error being relied upon as the basis for reissue; and
(2) All errors being corrected in the reissue application up to the
time of filing of the oath or declaration under this paragraph arose
without any deceptive intention on the part of the applicant.
(b)(1) For any error corrected, which is not covered by the oath or
declaration submitted under paragraph (a) of this section, applicant
must submit a supplemental oath or declaration stating that every such
error arose without any deceptive intention on the part of the
applicant. Any supplemental oath or declaration required by this
paragraph must be submitted before allowance and may be submitted:
(i) With any amendment prior to allowance; or
(ii) In order to overcome a rejection under 35 U.S.C. 251 made by
the examiner where it is indicated that the submission of a supplemental
oath or declaration as required by this paragraph will overcome the
rejection.
(2) For any error sought to be corrected after allowance, a
supplemental oath or declaration must accompany the requested correction
stating that the error(s) to be corrected arose without any deceptive
intention on the part of the applicant.
(c) Having once stated an error upon which the reissue is based, as
set forth in paragraph (a)(1), unless all errors previously stated in
the oath or declaration are no longer being corrected, a subsequent oath
or declaration under paragraph (b) of this section need not specifically
identify any other error or errors being corrected.
(d) The oath or declaration required by paragraph (a) of this
section may be submitted under the provisions of Sec. 1.53(f).
[62 FR 53196, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.176 Examination of reissue.
(a) A reissue application will be examined in the same manner as a
non-reissue, non-provisional application, and will be subject to all the
requirements of the rules related to non-reissue applications.
Applications for reissue will be acted on by the examiner in advance of
other applications.
(b) Restriction between subject matter of the original patent claims
and previously unclaimed subject matter may be required (restriction
involving only subject matter of the original patent claims will not be
required). If restriction is required, the subject matter of the
original patent claims will be held to be constructively elected unless
a disclaimer of all the patent claims is filed in the reissue
application, which
[[Page 92]]
disclaimer cannot be withdrawn by applicant.
[65 FR 54676, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.177 Issuance of multiple reissue patents.
(a) The Office may reissue a patent as multiple reissue patents. If
applicant files more than one application for the reissue of a single
patent, each such application must contain or be amended to contain in
the first sentence of the specification a notice stating that more than
one reissue application has been filed and identifying each of the
reissue applications by relationship, application number and filing
date. The Office may correct by certificate of correction under
Sec. 1.322 any reissue patent resulting from an application to which
this paragraph applies that does not contain the required notice.
(b) If applicant files more than one application for the reissue of
a single patent, each claim of the patent being reissued must be
presented in each of the reissue applications as an amended, unamended,
or canceled (shown in brackets) claim, with each such claim bearing the
same number as in the patent being reissued. The same claim of the
patent being reissued may not be presented in its original unamended
form for examination in more than one of such multiple reissue
applications. The numbering of any added claims in any of the multiple
reissue applications must follow the number of the highest numbered
original patent claim.
(c) If any one of the several reissue applications by itself fails
to correct an error in the original patent as required by 35 U.S.C. 251
but is otherwise in condition for allowance, the Office may suspend
action in the allowable application until all issues are resolved as to
at least one of the remaining reissue applications. The Office may also
merge two or more of the multiple reissue applications into a single
reissue application. No reissue application containing only unamended
patent claims and not correcting an error in the original patent will be
passed to issue by itself.
[65 FR 54676, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.178 Original patent; continuing duty of applicant.
(a) The application for a reissue should be accompanied by either an
offer to surrender the original patent, or the original patent itself,
or if the original is lost or inaccessible, by a statement to that
effect. The application may be accepted for examination in the absence
of the original patent or the statement, but one or the other must be
supplied before the application is allowed. If a reissue application is
refused, the original patent, if surrendered, will be returned to
applicant upon request.
(b) In any reissue application before the Office, the applicant must
call to the attention of the Office any prior or concurrent proceedings
in which the patent (for which reissue is requested) is or was involved,
such as interferences, reissues, reexaminations, or litigations and the
results of such proceedings (see also Sec. 1.173(a)(1)).
[65 FR 54676, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.179 Notice of reissue application.
When an application for a reissue is filed, there will be placed in
the file of the original patent a notice stating that an application for
reissue has been filed. When the reissue is granted or the reissue
application is otherwise terminated, the fact will be added to the
notice in the file of the original patent.
Petitions and Action by the Commissioner
Authority: 35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123.
Sec. 1.181 Petition to the Commissioner.
(a) Petition may be taken to the Commissioner:
(1) From any action or requirement of any examiner in the ex parte
prosecution of an application, or in the ex parte or inter partes
prosecution of a reexamination proceeding which is not subject to appeal
to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences or to the court;
(2) In cases in which a statute or the rules specify that the matter
is to be determined directly by or reviewed by the Commissioner; and
[[Page 93]]
(3) To invoke the supervisory authority of the Commissioner in
appropriate circumstances. For petitions in interferences, see
Sec. 1.644.
(b) Any such petition must contain a statement of the facts involved
and the point or points to be reviewed and the action requested. Briefs
or memoranda, if any, in support thereof should accompany or be embodied
in the petition; and where facts are to be proven, the proof in the form
of affidavits or declarations (and exhibits, if any) must accompany the
petition.
(c) When a petition is taken from an action or requirement of an
examiner in the ex parte prosecution of an application, or in the ex
parte or inter partes prosecution of a reexamination proceeding, it may
be required that there have been a proper request for reconsideration
(Sec. 1.111) and a repeated action by the examiner. The examiner may be
directed by the Commissioner to furnish a written statement, within a
specified time, setting forth the reasons for his or her decision upon
the matters averred in the petition, supplying a copy to the petitioner.
(d) Where a fee is required for a petition to the Commissioner the
appropriate section of this part will so indicate. If any required fee
does not accompany the petition, the petition will be dismissed.
(e) Oral hearing will not be granted except when considered
necessary by the Commissioner.
(f) The mere filing of a petition will not stay any period for reply
that may be running against the application, nor act as a stay of other
proceedings. Any petition under this part not filed within two months of
the mailing date of the action or notice from which relief is requested
may be dismissed as untimely, except as otherwise provided. This two-
month period is not extendable.
(g) The Commissioner may delegate to appropriate Patent and
Trademark Office officials the determination of petitions.
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 34 FR 18857, Nov. 26, 1969;
47 FR 41278, Sept. 17, 1982; 49 FR 48452, Dec. 12, 1984; 65 FR 54676,
Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 76774, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.182 Questions not specifically provided for.
All situations not specifically provided for in the regulations of
this part will be decided in accordance with the merits of each
situation by or under the authority of the Commissioner, subject to such
other requirements as may be imposed, and such decision will be
communicated to the interested parties in writing. Any petition seeking
a decision under this section must be accompanied by the petition fee
set forth in Sec. 1.17(h).
[62 FR 53196, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.183 Suspension of rules.
In an extraordinary situation, when justice requires, any
requirement of the regulations in this part which is not a requirement
of the statutes may be suspended or waived by the Commissioner or the
Commissioner's designee, sua sponte, or on petition of the interested
party, subject to such other requirements as may be imposed. Any
petition under this section must be accompanied by the petition fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(h).
[47 FR 41278, Sept. 17, 1982]
Sec. 1.184 [Reserved]
Appeal to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences
Authority: Secs. 1.191 to 1.198 also issued under 35 U.S.C. 134.
Sec. 1.191 Appeal to Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
(a) Every applicant for a patent or for reissue of a patent, and
every owner of a patent under ex parte reexamination filed under
Sec. 1.510 for a patent that issued from an original application filed
in the United States before November 29, 1999, any of whose claims has
been twice or finally (Sec. 1.113) rejected, may appeal from the
decision of the examiner to the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences by filing a notice of appeal and the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(b) within the time period provided under Secs. 1.134 and 1.136
for reply. Notwithstanding the above, for an ex parte reexamination
proceeding filed under Sec. 1.510 for a patent that issued from an
[[Page 94]]
original application filed in the United States on or after November 29,
1999, no appeal may be filed until the claims have been finally rejected
(Sec. 1.113). Appeals to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences
in inter partes reexamination proceedings filed under Sec. 1.913 are
controlled by Secs. 1.959 through 1.981. Sections 1.191 through 1.198
are not applicable to appeals in inter partes reexamination proceedings
filed under Sec. 1.913.
(b) The signature requirement of Sec. 1.33 does not apply to a
notice of appeal filed under this section.
(c) An appeal when taken must be taken from the rejection of all
claims under rejection which the applicant or patent owner proposes to
contest. Questions relating to matters not affecting the merits of the
invention may be required to be settled before an appeal can be
considered.
(d) The time periods set forth in Secs. 1.191 and 1.192 are subject
to the provisions of Sec. 1.136 for patent applications and
Sec. 1.550(c) for reexamination proceedings. The time periods set forth
in Secs. 1.193, 1.194, 1.196 and 1.197 are subject to the provisions of
Sec. 1.136(b) for patent applications or Sec. 1.550(c) for reexamination
proceedings. See Sec. 1.304(a) for extensions of time for filing a
notice of appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or
for commencing a civil action.
(e) Jurisdiction over the application or patent under reexamination
passes to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences upon transmittal
of the file, including all briefs and examiner's answers, to the Board.
Prior to the entry of a decision on the appeal, the Commissioner may sua
sponte order the application remanded to the examiner.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[46 FR 29183, May 29, 1981, as amended at 49 FR 555, Jan. 4, 1984; 49 FR
48453, Dec. 12, 1984; 54 FR 29552, July 13, 1989; 58 FR 54510, Oct. 22,
1993; 62 FR 53196, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 76774, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.192 Appellant's brief.
(a) Appellant must, within two months from the date of the notice of
appeal under Sec. 1.191 or within the time allowed for reply to the
action from which the appeal was taken, if such time is later, file a
brief in triplicate. The brief must be accompanied by the fee set forth
in Sec. 1.17(c) and must set forth the authorities and arguments on
which appellant will rely to maintain the appeal. Any arguments or
authorities not included in the brief will be refused consideration by
the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, unless good cause is
shown.
(b) On failure to file the brief, accompanied by the requisite fee,
within the time allowed, the appeal shall stand dismissed.
(c) The brief shall contain the following items under appropriate
headings and in the order indicated below unless the brief is filed by
an applicant who is not represented by a registered practitioner:
(1) Real party in interest. A statement identifying the real party
in interest, if the party named in the caption of the brief is not the
real party in interest.
(2) Related appeals and interferences. A Statement identifying by
number and filing date all other appeals or interferences known to
appellant, the appellant's legal representative, or assignee which will
directly affect or be directly affected by or have a bearing on the
Board's decision in the pending appeal.
(3) Status of claims. A statement of the status of all the claims,
pending or cancelled, and identifying the claims appealed.
(4) Status of amendments. A statement of the status of any amendment
filed subsequent to final rejection.
(5) Summary of invention. A concise explanation of the invention
defined in the claims involved in the appeal, which shall refer to the
specification by page and line number, and to the drawing, if any, by
reference characters.
(6) Issues. A concise statement of the issues presented for review.
(7) Grouping of claims. For each ground of rejection which appellant
contests and which applies to a group of two or more claims, the Board
shall select a single claim from the group and shall decide the appeal
as to the ground of rejection on the basis of that claim alone unless a
statement is included that the claims of the group do not stand or fall
together and, in the
[[Page 95]]
argument under paragraph (c)(8) of this section, appellant explains why
the claims of the group are believed to be separately patentable. Merely
pointing out differences in what the claims cover is not an argument as
to why the claims are separately patentable.
(8) Argument. The contentions of appellant with respect to each of
the issues presented for review in paragraph (c)(6) of this section, and
the basis therefor, with citations of the authorities, statutes, and
parts of the record relied on. Each issue should be treated under a
separate heading.
(i) For each rejection under 35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph, the
argument shall specify the errors in the rejection and how the first
paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112 is complied with, including, as appropriate,
how the specification and drawings, if any,
(A) Describe the subject matter defined by each of the rejected
claims,
(B) Enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the subject
matter defined by each of the rejected claims, and
(C) Set forth the best mode contemplated by the inventor of carrying
out his or her invention.
(ii) For each rejection under 35 U.S.C. 112, second paragraph, the
argument shall specify the errors in the rejection and how the claims
particularly point out and distinctly claim the subject matter which
applicant regards as the invention.
(iii) For each rejection under 35 U.S.C. 102, the argument shall
specify the errors in the rejection and why the rejected claims are
patentable under 35 U.S.C. 102, including any specific limitations in
the rejected claims which are not described in the prior art relied upon
in the rejection.
(iv) For each rejection under 35 U.S.C. 103, the argument shall
specify the errors in the rejection and, if appropriate, the specific
limitations in the rejected claims which are not described in the prior
art relied on in the rejection, and shall explain how such limitations
render the claimed subject matter unobvious over the prior art. If the
rejection is based upon a combination of references, the argument shall
explain why the references, taken as a whole, do not suggest the claimed
subject matter, and shall include, as may be appropriate, an explanation
of why features disclosed in one reference may not properly be combined
with features disclosed in another reference. A general argument that
all the limitations are not described in a single reference does not
satisfy the requirements of this paragraph.
(v) For any rejection other than those referred to in paragraphs
(c)(8) (i) to (iv) of this section, the argument shall specify the
errors in the rejection and the specific limitations in the rejected
claims, if appropriate, or other reasons, which cause the rejection to
be in error.
(9) Appendix. An appendix containing a copy of the claims involved
in the appeal.
(d) If a brief is filed which does not comply with all the
requirements of paragraph (c) of this section, appellant will be
notified of the reasons for non-compliance and provided with a period of
one month within which to file an amended brief. If appellant does not
file an amended brief during the one-month period, or files an amended
brief which does not overcome all the reasons for non-compliance stated
in the notification, the appeal will stand dismissed.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[36 FR 5850, Mar. 30, 1971, as amended at 53 FR 23734, June 23, 1988; 58
FR 54510, Oct. 22, 1993; 60 FR 14518, Mar. 17, 1995; 62 FR 53196, Oct.
10, 1997]
Sec. 1.193 Examiner's answer and reply brief.
(a)(1) The primary examiner may, within such time as may be directed
by the Commissioner, furnish a written statement in answer to
appellant's brief including such explanation of the invention claimed
and of the references and grounds of rejection as may be necessary,
supplying a copy to appellant. If the primary examiner finds that the
appeal is not regular in form or does not relate to an appealable
action, the primary examiner shall so state.
(2) An examiner's answer must not include a new ground of rejection,
but if an amendment under Sec. 1.116 proposes to add or amend one or
more claims and appellant was advised that the
[[Page 96]]
amendment under Sec. 1.116 would be entered for purposes of appeal and
which individual rejection(s) set forth in the action from which the
appeal was taken would be used to reject the added or amended claim(s),
then the appeal brief must address the rejection(s) of the claim(s)
added or amended by the amendment under Sec. 1.116 as appellant was so
advised and the examiner's answer may include the rejection(s) of the
claim(s) added or amended by the amendment under Sec. 1.116 as appellant
was so advised. The filing of an amendment under Sec. 1.116 which is
entered for purposes of appeal represents appellant's consent that when
so advised any appeal proceed on those claim(s) added or amended by the
amendment under Sec. 1.116 subject to any rejection set forth in the
action from which the appeal was taken.
(b)(1) Appellant may file a reply brief to an examiner's answer or a
supplemental examiner's answer within two months from the date of such
examiner's answer or supplemental examiner's answer. See Sec. 1.136(b)
for extensions of time for filing a reply brief in a patent application
and Sec. 1.550(c) for extensions of time for filing a reply brief in a
reexamination proceeding. The primary examiner must either acknowledge
receipt and entry of the reply brief or withdraw the final rejection and
reopen prosecution to respond to the reply brief. A supplemental
examiner's answer is not permitted, unless the application has been
remanded by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences for such
purpose.
(2) Where prosecution is reopened by the primary examiner after an
appeal or reply brief has been filed, appellant must exercise one of the
following two options to avoid abandonment of the application:
(i) File a reply under Sec. 1.111, if the Office action is not
final, or a reply under Sec. 1.113, if the Office action is final; or
(ii) Request reinstatement of the appeal. If reinstatement of the
appeal is requested, such request must be accompanied by a supplemental
appeal brief, but no new amendments, affidavits (Secs. 1.130, 1.131 or
1.132) or other evidence are permitted.
[62 FR 53197, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54676, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.194 Oral hearing.
(a) An oral hearing should be requested only in those circumstances
in which appellant considers such a hearing necessary or desirable for a
proper presentation of the appeal. An appeal decided without an oral
hearing will receive the same consideration by the Board of Patent
Appeals and Interferences as appeals decided after oral hearing.
(b) If appellant desires an oral hearing, appellant must file, in a
separate paper, a written request for such hearing accompanied by the
fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(d) within two months from the date of the
examiner's answer. If appellant requests an oral hearing and submits
therewith the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(d), an oral argument may be
presented by, or on behalf of, the primary examiner if considered
desirable by either the primary examiner or the Board. See Sec. 1.136(b)
for extensions of time for requesting an oral hearing in a patent
application and Sec. 1.550(c) for extensions of time for requesting an
oral hearing in a reexamination proceeding.
(c) If no request and fee for oral hearing have been timely filed by
appellant, the appeal will be assigned for consideration and decision.
If appellant has requested an oral hearing and has submitted the fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(d), a day of hearing will be set, and due notice
thereof given to appellant and to the primary examiner. A hearing will
be held as stated in the notice, and oral argument will be limited to
twenty minutes for appellant and fifteen minutes for the primary
examiner unless otherwise ordered before the hearing begins. If the
Board decides that a hearing is not necessary, the Board will so notify
appellant.
[62 FR 53197, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.195 Affidavits or declarations after appeal.
Affidavits, declarations, or exhibits submitted after the case has
been appealed will not be admitted without a showing of good and
sufficient reasons why they were not earlier presented.
[34 FR 18858, Nov. 26, 1969]
[[Page 97]]
Sec. 1.196 Decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
(a) The Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, in its decision,
may affirm or reverse the decision of the examiner in whole or in part
on the grounds and on the claims specified by the examiner or remand the
application to the examiner for further consideration. The affirmance of
the rejection of a claim on any of the grounds specified constitutes a
general affirmance of the decision of the examiner on that claim, except
as to any ground specifically reversed.
(b) Should the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences have
knowledge of any grounds not involved in the appeal for rejecting any
pending claim, it may include in the decision a statement to that effect
with its reasons for so holding, which statement constitutes a new
ground of rejection of the claim. A new ground of rejection shall not be
considered final for purposes of judicial review. When the Board of
Patent Appeals and Interferences makes a new ground of rejection, the
appellant, within two months from the date of the decision, must
exercise one of the following two options with respect to the new ground
of rejection to avoid termination of proceedings (Sec. 1.197(c)) as to
the rejected claims:
(1) Submit an appropriate amendment of the claims so rejected or a
showing of facts relating to the claims so rejected, or both, and have
the matter reconsidered by the examiner, in which event the application
will be remanded to the examiner. The new ground of rejection is binding
upon the examiner unless an amendment or showing of facts not previously
of record be made which, in the opinion of the examiner, overcomes the
new ground of rejection stated in the decision. Should the examiner
reject the claims, appellant may again appeal pursuant to Secs. 1.191
through 1.195 to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
(2) Request that the application be reheard under Sec. 1.197(b) by
the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences upon the same record. The
request for rehearing must address the new ground of rejection and state
with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or
overlooked in rendering the decision and also state all other grounds
upon which rehearing is sought. Where request for such rehearing is
made, the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences shall rehear the new
ground of rejection and, if necessary, render a new decision which shall
include all grounds of rejection upon which a patent is refused. The
decision on rehearing is deemed to incorporate the earlier decision for
purposes of appeal, except for those portions specifically withdrawn on
rehearing, and is final for the purpose of judicial review, except when
noted otherwise in the decision.
(c) Should the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences include an explicit statement that a claim may be allowed
in amended form, appellant shall have the right to amend in conformity
with such statement which shall be binding on the examiner in the
absence of new references or grounds of rejection.
(d) The Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences may require
appellant to address any matter that is deemed appropriate for a
reasoned decision on the pending appeal. Appellant will be given a non-
extendable time period within which to respond to such a requirement.
(e) Whenever a decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences includes or allows a remand, that decision shall not be
considered a final decision. When appropriate, upon conclusion of
proceedings on remand before the examiner, the Board of Patent Appeals
and Interferences may enter an order otherwise making its decision
final.
(f) See Sec. 1.136(b) for extensions of time to take action under
this section in a patent application and Sec. 1.550(c) for extensions of
time in a reexamination proceeding.
[49 FR 48453, Dec. 12, 1984, as amended at 54 FR 29552, July 13, 1989;
58 FR 54510, Oct. 22, 1993; 62 FR 53197, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.197 Action following decision.
(a) After decision by the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences,
the application will be returned to the examiner, subject to appellant's
right of
[[Page 98]]
appeal or other review, for such further action by appellant or by the
examiner, as the condition of the application may require, to carry into
effect the decision.
(b) Appellant may file a single request for rehearing within two
months from the date of the original decision, unless the original
decision is so modified by the decision on rehearing as to become, in
effect, a new decision, and the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences so states. The request for rehearing must state with
particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or
overlooked in rendering the decision and also state all other grounds
upon which rehearing is sought. See Sec. 1.136(b) for extensions of time
for seeking rehearing in a patent application and Sec. 1.550(c) for
extensions of time for seeking rehearing in a reexamination proceeding.
(c) Termination of proceedings. Proceedings are considered
terminated by the dismissal of an appeal or the failure to timely file
an appeal to the court or a civil action (Sec. 1.304) except:
(1) Where claims stand allowed in an application or
(2) Where the nature of the decision requires further action by the
examiner.
The date of termination of proceedings is the date on which the appeal
is dismissed or the date on which the time for appeal to the court or
review by civil action (Sec. 1.304) expires. If an appeal to the court
or a civil action has been filed, proceedings are considered terminated
when the appeal or civil action is terminated. An appeal to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is terminated when the mandate
is received by the Office. A civil action is terminated when the time to
appeal the judgment expires.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[46 FR 29184, May 29, 1981, as amended at 49 FR 48453, Dec. 12, 1984; 54
FR 29552, July 13, 1989; 58 FR 54510, Oct. 22, 1993; 62 FR 53198, Oct.
10, 1997]
Sec. 1.198 Reopening after decision.
Cases which have been decided by the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences will not be reopened or reconsidered by the primary
examiner except under the provisions of Sec. 1.114 or Sec. 1.196 without
the written authority of the Commissioner, and then only for the
consideration of matters not already adjudicated, sufficient cause being
shown.
[65 FR 14873, Mar. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.198 Reopening after decision.
Cases which have been decided by the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences will not be reopened or reconsidered by the primary
examiner except under the provisions of Sec. 1.196 without the written
authority of the Commissioner, and then only for the consideration of
matters not already adjudicated, sufficient cause being shown.
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 49 FR 48453, Dec. 12, 1984]
Publication of Applications
Source: 65 FR 57058, Sept. 20, 2000, unless otherwise noted.
Sec. 1.211 Publication of applications.
(a) Each U.S. national application for patent filed in the Office
under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) and each international application in compliance
with 35 U.S.C. 371 will be published promptly after the expiration of a
period of eighteen months from the earliest filing date for which a
benefit is sought under title 35, United States Code, unless:
(1) The application is recognized by the Office as no longer
pending;
(2) The application is national security classified (see
Sec. 5.2(c)), subject to a secrecy order under 35 U.S.C. 181, or under
national security review;
(3) The application has issued as a patent in sufficient time to be
removed from the publication process; or
(4) The application was filed with a nonpublication request in
compliance with Sec. 1.213(a).
(b) Provisional applications under 35 U.S.C. 111(b) shall not be
published, and design applications under 35 U.S.C. chapter 16 and
reissue applications under 35 U.S.C. chapter 25 shall not be published
under this section.
(c) An application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) will not be
published until it includes the basic filing fee (Sec. 1.16(a)
[[Page 99]]
or 1.16(g)), any English translation required by Sec. 1.52(d), and an
executed oath or declaration under Sec. 1.63. The Office may delay
publishing any application until it includes a specification having
papers in compliance with Sec. 1.52 and an abstract (Sec. 1.72(b)),
drawings in compliance with Sec. 1.84, and a sequence listing in
compliance with Secs. 1.821 through 1.825 (if applicable), and until any
petition under Sec. 1.47 is granted.
(d) The Office may refuse to publish an application, or to include a
portion of an application in the patent application publication
(Sec. 1.215), if publication of the application or portion thereof would
violate Federal or state law, or if the application or portion thereof
contains offensive or disparaging material.
(e) The publication fee set forth in Sec. 1.18(d) must be paid in
each application published under this section before the patent will be
granted. If an application is subject to publication under this section,
the sum specified in the notice of allowance under Sec. 1.311 will also
include the publication fee which must be paid within three months from
the date of mailing of the notice of allowance to avoid abandonment of
the application. This three-month period is not extendable. If the
application is not published under this section, the publication fee (if
paid) will be refunded.
Sec. 1.213 Nonpublication request.
(a) If the invention disclosed in an application has not been and
will not be the subject of an application filed in another country, or
under a multilateral international agreement, that requires publication
of applications eighteen months after filing, the application will not
be published under 35 U.S.C. 122(b) and Sec. 1.211 provided:
(1) A request (nonpublication request) is submitted with the
application upon filing;
(2) The request states in a conspicuous manner that the application
is not to be published under 35 U.S.C. 122(b);
(3) The request contains a certification that the invention
disclosed in the application has not been and will not be the subject of
an application filed in another country, or under a multilateral
international agreement, that requires publication at eighteen months
after filing; and
(4) The request is signed in compliance with Sec. 1.33(b).
(b) The applicant may rescind a nonpublication request at any time.
A request to rescind a nonpublication request under paragraph (a) of
this section must:
(1) Identify the application to which it is directed;
(2) State in a conspicuous manner that the request that the
application is not to be published under 35 U.S.C. 122(b) is rescinded;
and
(3) Be signed in compliance with Sec. 1.33(b).
(c) If an applicant who has submitted a nonpublication request under
paragraph (a) of this section subsequently files an application directed
to the invention disclosed in the application in which the
nonpublication request was submitted in another country, or under a
multilateral international agreement, that requires publication of
applications eighteen months after filing, the applicant must notify the
Office of such filing within forty-five days after the date of the
filing of such foreign or international application. The failure to
timely notify the Office of the filing of such foreign or international
application shall result in abandonment of the application in which the
nonpublication request was submitted (35 U.S.C. 122(b)(2)(B)(iii)).
Sec. 1.215 Patent application publication.
(a) The publication of an application under 35 U.S.C. 122(b) shall
include a patent application publication. The date of publication shall
be indicated on the patent application publication. The patent
application publication will be based upon the application papers
deposited on the filing date of the application, as well as the executed
oath or declaration submitted to complete the application, and any
application papers or drawings submitted in reply to a preexamination
notice requiring a title and abstract in compliance with Sec. 1.72,
application papers in compliance with Sec. 1.52, drawings in compliance
with Sec. 1.84, or a sequence listing in compliance with Secs. 1.821
through 1.825, except as otherwise provided in this
[[Page 100]]
section. The patent application publication will not include any
amendments, including preliminary amendments, unless applicant supplies
a copy of the application containing the amendment pursuant to paragraph
(c) of this section.
(b) If applicant wants the patent application publication to include
assignee information, the applicant must include the assignee
information on the application transmittal sheet or the application data
sheet (Sec. 1.76). Assignee information may not be included on the
patent application publication unless this information is provided on
the application transmittal sheet or application data sheet included
with the application on filing. Providing this information on the
application transmittal sheet or the application data sheet does not
substitute for compliance with any requirement of part 3 of this chapter
to have an assignment recorded by the Office.
(c) At applicant's option, the patent application publication will
be based upon the copy of the application (specification, drawings, and
oath or declaration) as amended during examination, provided that
applicant supplies such a copy in compliance with the Office electronic
filing system requirements within one month of the actual filing date of
the application or fourteen months of the earliest filing date for which
a benefit is sought under title 35, United States Code, whichever is
later.
(d) If the copy of the application submitted pursuant to paragraph
(c) of this section does not comply with the Office electronic filing
system requirements, the Office will publish the application as provided
in paragraph (a) of this section. If, however, the Office has not
started the publication process, the Office may use an untimely filed
copy of the application supplied by the applicant under paragraph (c) of
this section in creating the patent application publication.
Sec. 1.217 Publication of a redacted copy of an application.
(a) If an applicant has filed applications in one or more foreign
countries, directly or through a multilateral international agreement,
and such foreign-filed applications or the description of the invention
in such foreign-filed applications is less extensive than the
application or description of the invention in the application filed in
the Office, the applicant may submit a redacted copy of the application
filed in the Office for publication, eliminating any part or description
of the invention that is not also contained in any of the corresponding
applications filed in a foreign country. The Office will publish the
application as provided in Sec. 1.215(a) unless the applicant files a
redacted copy of the application in compliance with this section within
sixteen months after the earliest filing date for which a benefit is
sought under title 35, United States Code.
(b) The redacted copy of the application must be submitted in
compliance with the Office electronic filing system requirements. The
title of the invention in the redacted copy of the application must
correspond to the title of the application at the time the redacted copy
of the application is submitted to the Office. If the redacted copy of
the application does not comply with the Office electronic filing system
requirements, the Office will publish the application as provided in
Sec. 1.215(a).
(c) The applicant must also concurrently submit in paper
(Sec. 1.52(a)) to be filed in the application:
(1) A certified copy of each foreign-filed application that
corresponds to the application for which a redacted copy is submitted;
(2) A translation of each such foreign-filed application that is in
a language other than English, and a statement that the translation is
accurate;
(3) A marked-up copy of the application showing the redactions in
brackets; and
(4) A certification that the redacted copy of the application
eliminates only the part or description of the invention that is not
contained in any application filed in a foreign country, directly or
through a multilateral international agreement, that corresponds to the
application filed in the Office.
(d) The Office will provide a copy of the complete file wrapper and
contents of an application for which a redacted copy was submitted under
this section
[[Page 101]]
to any person upon written request pursuant to Sec. 1.14(c)(2), unless
applicant complies with the requirements of paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(2),
and (d)(3) of this section.
(1) Applicant must accompany the submission required by paragraph
(c) of this section with the following:
(i) A copy of any Office correspondence previously received by
applicant including any desired redactions, and a second copy of all
Office correspondence previously received by applicant showing the
redacted material in brackets; and
(ii) A copy of each submission previously filed by the applicant
including any desired redactions, and a second copy of each submission
previously filed by the applicant showing the redacted material in
brackets.
(2) In addition to providing the submission required by paragraphs
(c) and (d)(1) of this section, applicant must:
(i) Within one month of the date of mailing of any correspondence
from the Office, file a copy of such Office correspondence including any
desired redactions, and a second copy of such Office correspondence
showing the redacted material in brackets; and
(ii) With each submission by the applicant, include a copy of such
submission including any desired redactions, and a second copy of such
submission showing the redacted material in brackets.
(3) Each submission under paragraph (d)(1) or (d)(2) of this
paragraph must also be accompanied by the processing fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(i) and a certification that the redactions are limited to the
elimination of material that is relevant only to the part or description
of the invention that was not contained in the redacted copy of the
application submitted for publication.
(e) The provisions of Sec. 1.8 do not apply to the time periods set
forth in this section.
Sec. 1.219 Early publication.
Applications that will be published under Sec. 1.211 may be
published earlier than as set forth in Sec. 1.211(a) at the request of
the applicant. Any request for early publication must be accompanied by
the publication fee set forth in Sec. 1.18(d). If the applicant does not
submit a copy of the application in compliance with the Office
electronic filing system requirements pursuant to Sec. 1.215(c), the
Office will publish the application as provided in Sec. 1.215(a). No
consideration will be given to requests for publication on a certain
date, and such requests will be treated as a request for publication as
soon as possible.
Sec. 1.221 Voluntary publication or republication of patent application publication.
(a) Any request for publication of an application filed before, but
pending on, November 29, 2000, and any request for republication of an
application previously published under Sec. 1.211, must include a copy
of the application in compliance with the Office electronic filing
system requirements and be accompanied by the publication fee set forth
in Sec. 1.18(d) and the processing fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(i). If the
request does not comply with the requirements of this paragraph or the
copy of the application does not comply with the Office electronic
filing system requirements, the Office will not publish the application
and will refund the publication fee.
(b) The Office will grant a request for a corrected or revised
patent application publication other than as provided in paragraph (a)
of this section only when the Office makes a material mistake which is
apparent from Office records. Any request for a corrected or revised
patent application publication other than as provided in paragraph (a)
of this section must be filed within two months from the date of the
patent application publication. This period is not extendable.
Miscellaneous Provisions
Sec. 1.248 Service of papers; manner of service; proof of service in cases other than interferences.
(a) Service of papers must be on the attorney or agent of the party
if there be such or on the party if there is no attorney or agent, and
may be made in any of the following ways:
(1) By delivering a copy of the paper to the person served;
[[Page 102]]
(2) By leaving a copy at the usual place of business of the person
served with someone in his employment;
(3) When the person served has no usual place of business, by
leaving a copy at the person's residence, with some person of suitable
age and discretion who resides there;
(4) Transmission by first class mail. When service is by mail the
date of mailing will be regarded as the date of service;
(5) Whenever it shall be satisfactorily shown to the Commissioner
that none of the above modes of obtaining or serving the paper is
practicable, service may be by notice published in the Official Gazette.
(b) Papers filed in the Patent and Trademark Office which are
required to be served shall contain proof of service. Proof of service
may appear on or be affixed to papers filed. Proof of service shall
include the date and manner of service. In the case of personal service,
proof of service shall also include the name of any person served,
certified by the person who made service. Proof of service may be made
by:
(1) An acknowledgement of service by or on behalf of the person
served or
(2) A statement signed by the attorney or agent containing the
information required by this section.
(c) See Sec. 1.646 for service of papers in interferences.
[46 FR 29184, May 29, 1981, as amended at 49 FR 48454, Dec. 12, 1984]
Sec. 1.251 Unlocatable file.
(a) In the event that the Office cannot locate the file of an
application, patent, or other patent-related proceeding after a
reasonable search, the Office will notify the applicant or patentee and
set a time period within which the applicant or patentee must comply
with the notice in accordance with one of paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or
(a)(3) of this section.
(1) Applicant or patentee may comply with a notice under this
section by providing:
(i) A copy of the applicant's or patentee's record (if any) of all
of the correspondence between the Office and the applicant or patentee
for such application, patent, or other proceeding (except for U.S.
patent documents);
(ii) A list of such correspondence; and
(iii) A statement that the copy is a complete and accurate copy of
the applicant's or patentee's record of all of the correspondence
between the Office and the applicant or patentee for such application,
patent, or other proceeding (except for U.S. patent documents), and
whether applicant or patentee is aware of any correspondence between the
Office and the applicant or patentee for such application, patent, or
other proceeding that is not among applicant's or patentee's records.
(2) Applicant or patentee may comply with a notice under this
section by:
(i) Producing the applicant's or patentee's record (if any) of all
of the correspondence between the Office and the applicant or patentee
for such application, patent, or other proceeding for the Office to copy
(except for U.S. patent documents); and
(ii) Providing a statement that the papers produced by applicant or
patentee are applicant's or patentee's complete record of all of the
correspondence between the Office and the applicant or patentee for such
application, patent, or other proceeding (except for U.S. patent
documents), and whether applicant or patentee is aware of any
correspondence between the Office and the applicant or patentee for such
application, patent, or other proceeding that is not among applicant's
or patentee's records.
(3) If applicant or patentee does not possess any record of the
correspondence between the Office and the applicant or patentee for such
application, patent, or other proceeding, applicant or patentee must
comply with a notice under this section by providing a statement that
applicant or patentee does not possess any record of the correspondence
between the Office and the applicant or patentee for such application,
patent, or other proceeding.
(b) With regard to a pending application, failure to comply with one
of paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(3) of this section within the time
period set in the notice will result in abandonment of the application.
[65 FR 69451, Nov. 17, 2000]
[[Page 103]]
Protests and Public Use Proceedings
Sec. 1.291 Protests by the public against pending applications.
(a) Protests by a member of the public against pending applications
will be referred to the examiner having charge of the subject matter
involved. A protest specifically identifying the application to which
the protest is directed will be entered in the application file if:
(1) The protest is submitted prior to the date the application was
published or the mailing of a notice of allowance under Sec. 1.311,
whichever occurs first; and
(2) The protest is either served upon the applicant in accordance
with Sec. 1.248, or filed with the Office in duplicate in the event
service is not possible.
(b) Protests raising fraud or other inequitable conduct issues will
be entered in the application file, generally without comment on those
issues. Protests which do not adequately identify a pending patent
application will be returned to the protestor and will not be further
considered by the Office. A protest submitted in accordance with the
second sentence of paragraph (a) of this section will be considered by
the Office if the application is still pending when the protest and
application file are brought before the examiner and it includes:
(1) A listing of the patents, publications, or other information
relied upon;
(2) A concise explanation of the relevance of each listed item;
(3) A copy of each listed patent or publication or other item of
information in written form or at least the pertinent portions thereof;
and
(4) An English language translation of all the necessary and
pertinent parts of any non-English language patent, publication, or
other item of information in written form relied upon.
(c) A member of the public filing a protest in an application under
paragraph (a) of this section will not receive any communications from
the Office relating to the protest, other than the return of a self-
addressed postcard which the member of the public may include with the
protest in order to receive an acknowledgment by the Office that the
protest has been received. In the absence of a request by the Office, an
applicant has no duty to, and need not, reply to a protest. The limited
involvement of the member of the public filing a protest pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section ends with the filing of the protest, and
no further submission on behalf of the protestor will be considered,
except for additional prior art, or unless such submission raises new
issues which could not have been earlier presented.
[47 FR 21752, May 19, 1982, as amended at 57 FR 2035, Jan. 17, 1992; 61
FR 42806, Aug. 19, 1996; 62 FR 53198, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 57060, Sept.
20, 2000]
Sec. 1.292 Public use proceedings.
(a) When a petition for the institution of public use proceedings,
supported by affidavits or declarations is found, on reference to the
examiner, to make a prima facie showing that the invention claimed in an
application believed to be on file had been in public use or on sale
more than one year before the filing of the application, a hearing may
be had before the Commissioner to determine whether a public use
proceeding should be instituted. If instituted, the Commissioner may
designate an appropriate official to conduct the public use proceeding,
including the setting of times for taking testimony, which shall be
taken as provided by Secs. 1.671 through 1.685. The petitioner will be
heard in the proceedings but after decision therein will not be heard
further in the prosecution of the application for patent.
(b) The petition and accompanying papers, or a notice that such a
petition has been filed, shall be entered in the application file if:
(1) The petition is accompanied by the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(j);
(2) The petition is served on the applicant in accordance with
Sec. 1.248, or filed with the Office in duplicate in the event service
is not possible; and
(3) The petition is submitted prior to the date the application was
published or the mailing of a notice of allowance under Sec. 1.311,
whichever occurs first.
(c) A petition for institution of public use proceedings shall not
be filed by a party to an interference as to an application involved in
the interference.
[[Page 104]]
Public use and on sale issues in an interference shall be raised by a
preliminary motion under Sec. 1.633(a).
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[42 FR 5595, Jan. 28, 1977, as amended at 49 FR 48454, Dec. 12, 1984; 61
FR 42807, Aug. 19, 1996; 65 FR 57060, Sept. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.293 Statutory invention registration.
(a) An applicant for an original patent may request, at any time
during the pendency of applicant's pending complete application, that
the specification and drawings be published as a statutory invention
registration. Any such request must be signed by (1) the applicant and
any assignee of record or (2) an attorney or agent of record in the
application.
(b) Any request for publication of a statutory invention
registration must include the following parts:
(1) A waiver of the applicant's right to receive a patent on the
invention claimed effective upon the date of publication of the
statutory invention registration;
(2) The required fee for filing a request for publication of a
statutory invention registration as provided for in Sec. 1.17 (n) or
(o);
(3) A statement that, in the opinion of the requester, the
application to which the request is directed meets the requirements of
35 U.S.C. 112; and
(4) A statement that, in the opinion of the requester, the
application to which the request is directed complies with the formal
requirements of this part for printing as a patent.
(c) A waiver filed with a request for a statutory invention
registration will be effective, upon publication of the statutory
invention registration, to waive the inventor's right to receive a
patent on the invention claimed in the statutory invention registration,
in any application for an original patent which is pending on, or filed
after, the date of publication of the statutory invention registration.
A waiver filed with a request for a statutory invention registration
will not affect the rights of any other inventor even if the subject
matter of the statutory invention registration and an application of
another inventor are commonly owned. A waiver filed with a request for a
statutory invention registration will not affect any rights in a patent
to the inventor which issued prior to the date of publication of the
statutory invention registration unless a reissue application is filed
seeking to enlarge the scope of the claims of the patent. See also
Sec. 1.104(c)(5).
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number
0651-0018)
[50 FR 9382, Mar. 7, 1985, as amended at 62 FR 53198, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.294 Examination of request for publication of a statutory invention registration and patent application to which the request is directed.
(a) Any request for a statutory invention registration will be
examined to determine if the requirements of Sec. 1.293 have been met.
The application to which the request is directed will be examined to
determine (1) if the subject matter of the application is appropriate
for publication, (2) if the requirements for publication are met, and
(3) if the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 112 and Sec. 1.293 of this part are
met.
(b) Applicant will be notified of the results of the examination set
forth in paragraph (a) of this section. If the requirements of
Sec. 1.293 and this section are not met by the request filed, the
notification to applicant will set a period of time within which to
comply with the requirements in order to avoid abandonment of the
application. If the application does not meet the requirements of 35
U.S.C. 112, the notification to applicant will include a rejection under
the appropriate provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112. The periods for reply
established pursuant to this section are subject to the extension of
time provisions of Sec. 1.136. After reply by the applicant, the
application will again be considered for publication of a statutory
invention registration. If the requirements of Sec. 1.293 and this
section are not timely met, the refusal to publish will be made final.
If the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 112 are not met, the rejection pursuant
to 35 U.S.C. 112 will be made final.
(c) If the examination pursuant to this section results in approval
of the request for a statutory invention registration the applicant will
be notified
[[Page 105]]
of the intent to publish a statutory invention registration.
[50 FR 9382, Mar. 7, 1985, as amended at 62 FR 53198, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.295 Review of decision finally refusing to publish a statutory invention registration.
(a) Any requester who is dissatisfied with the final refusal to
publish a statutory invention registration for reasons other than
compliance with 35 U.S.C. 112 may obtain review of the refusal to
publish the statutory invention registration by filing a petition to the
Commissioner accompanied by the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h) within one
month or such other time as is set in the decision refusing publication.
Any such petition should comply with the requirements of Sec. 1.181(b).
The petition may include a request that the petition fee be refunded if
the final refusal to publish a statutory invention registration for
reasons other than compliance with 35 U.S.C. 112 is determined to result
from an error by the Patent and Trademark Office.
(b) Any requester who is dissatisfied with a decision finally
rejecting claims pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 112 may obtain review of the
decision by filing an appeal to the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences pursuant to Sec. 1.191. If the decision rejecting claims
pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 112 is reversed, the request for a statutory
invention registration will be approved and the registration published
if all of the other provisions of Sec. 1.293 and this section are met.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number
0651-0018)
[50 FR 9382, Mar. 7, 1985]
Sec. 1.296 Withdrawal of request for publication of statutory invention registration.
A request for a statutory invention registration, which has been
filed, may be withdrawn prior to the date of the notice of the intent to
publish a statutory invention registration issued pursuant to
Sec. 1.294(c) by filing a request to withdraw the request for
publication of a statutory invention registration. The request to
withdraw may also include a request for a refund of any amount paid in
excess of the application filing fee and a handling fee of $130.00 which
will be retained. Any request to withdraw the request for publication of
a statutory invention registration filed on or after the date of the
notice of intent to publish issued pursuant to Sec. 1.294(c) must be in
the form of a petition pursuant to Sec. 1.183 accompanied by the fee set
forth in Sec. 1.17(h).
[56 FR 65153, Dec. 13, 1991]
Sec. 1.297 Publication of statutory invention registration.
(a) If the request for a statutory invention registration is
approved the statutory invention registration will be published. The
statutory invention registration will be mailed to the requester at the
correspondence address as provided for in Sec. 1.33(a). A notice of the
publication of each statutory invention registration will be published
in the Official Gazette.
(b) Each statutory invention registration published will include a
statement relating to the attributes of a statutory invention
registration. The statement will read as follows:
A statutory invention registration is not a patent. It has the
defensive attributes of a patent but does not have the enforceable
attributes of a patent. No article or advertisement or the like may use
the term patent, or any term suggestive of a patent, when referring to a
statutory invention registration. For more specific information on the
rights associated with a statutory invention registration see 35 U.S.C.
157.
[50 FR 9383, Mar. 7, 1985, as amended at 50 FR 31826, Aug. 6, 1985]
Review of Patent and Trademark Office Decisions by Court
Sec. 1.301 Appeal to U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
Any applicant or any owner of a patent involved in any ex parte
reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.510, dissatisfied with the
decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, and any party
to an interference dissatisfied with the decision of the Board of Patent
Appeals and Interferences, may appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit. The appellant must take the following steps in such
an appeal: In the U. S. Patent and Trademark Office, file a written
[[Page 106]]
notice of appeal directed to the Commissioner (see Secs. 1.302 and
1.304); and in the Court, file a copy of the notice of appeal and pay
the fee for appeal as provided by the rules of the Court. For inter
partes reexamination proceedings filed under Sec. 1.913, Sec. 1.983 is
controlling.
[65 FR 76774, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.302 Notice of appeal.
(a) When an appeal is taken to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit, the appellant shall give notice thereof to the
Commissioner within the time specified in Sec. 1.304.
(b) In interferences, the notice must be served as provided in
Sec. 1.646.
(c) A notice of appeal, if mailed to the Office, shall be addressed
as follows: Box 8, Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Washington,
DC 20231.
[50 FR 9383, Mar. 7, 1985, as amended at 53 FR 16414, May 9, 1988]
Sec. 1.303 Civil action under 35 U.S.C. 145, 146, 306.
(a) Any applicant or any owner of a patent involved in an ex parte
reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.510 for a patent that issues
from an original application filed in the United States before November
29, 1999, dissatisfied with the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals
and Interferences, and any party to an interference dissatisfied with
the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences may,
instead of appealing to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit (Sec. 1.301), have remedy by civil action under 35 U.S.C. 145 or
146, as appropriate. Such civil action must be commenced within the time
specified in Sec. 1.304.
(b) If an applicant in an ex parte case or an owner of a patent
involved in an ex parte reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.510
for a patent that issues from an original application filed in the
United States before November 29, 1999, has taken an appeal to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, he or she thereby waives his
or her right to proceed under 35 U.S.C. 145.
(c) If any adverse party to an appeal taken to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit by a defeated party in an interference
proceeding files notice with the Commissioner within twenty days after
the filing of the defeated party's notice of appeal to the court
(Sec. 1.302), that he or she elects to have all further proceedings
conducted as provided in 35 U.S.C. 146, the notice of election must be
served as provided in Sec. 1.646.
(d) For an ex parte reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.510
for a patent that issues from an original application filed in the
United States on or after November 29, 1999, and for an inter partes
reexamination proceeding filed under Sec. 1.913, no remedy by civil
action under 35 U.S.C. 145 is available.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1123)
[47 FR 47381, Oct. 26, 1982, as amended at 49 FR 48454, Dec. 12, 1984;
54 FR 29553, July 13, 1989; 65 FR 76774, Dec. 7, 2000]
Sec. 1.304 Time for appeal or civil action.
(a)(1) The time for filing the notice of appeal to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Sec. 1.302) or for commencing a civil
action (Sec. 1.303) is two months from the date of the decision of the
Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences. If a request for rehearing or
reconsideration of the decision is filed within the time period provided
under Sec. 1.197(b), Sec. 1.658(b), or Sec. 1.979(a), the time for
filing an appeal or commencing a civil action shall expire two months
after action on the request. In interferences the time for filing a
cross-appeal or cross-action expires:
(i) Fourteen days after service of the notice of appeal or the
summons and complaint; or
(ii) Two months after the date of decision of the Board of Patent
Appeals and Interferences, whichever is later.
(2) The time periods set forth in this section are not subject to
the provisions of Sec. 1.136, Sec. 1.550(c), Sec. 1.956, or
Sec. 1.645(a) or (b).
(3) The Commissioner may extend the time for filing an appeal or
commencing a civil action:
(i) For good cause shown if requested in writing before the
expiration of the period for filing an appeal or commencing a civil
action, or
(ii) Upon written request after the expiration of the period for
filing an appeal or commencing a civil action upon a showing that the
failure to act was the result of excusable neglect.
[[Page 107]]
(b) The times specified in this section in days are calendar days.
The times specified herein in months are calendar months except that one
day shall be added to any two-month period which includes February 28.
If the last day of the time specified for appeal or commencing a civil
action falls on a Saturday, Sunday or Federal holiday in the District of
Columbia, the time is extended to the next day which is neither a
Saturday, Sunday nor a Federal holiday.
(c) If a defeated party to an interference has taken an appeal to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and an adverse party
has filed notice under 35 U.S.C. 141 electing to have all further
proceedings conducted under 35 U.S.C. 146 (Sec. 1.303(c)), the time for
filing a civil action thereafter is specified in 35 U.S.C. 141. The time
for filing a cross-action expires 14 days after service of the summons
and complaint.
[54 FR 29553, July 13, 1989, as amended at 58 FR 54502, Oct. 22, 1993;
62 FR 53198, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 76774, Dec. 7, 2000]
Allowance and Issue of Patent
Sec. 1.311 Notice of allowance.
(a) If, on examination, it appears that the applicant is entitled to
a patent under the law, a notice of allowance will be sent to the
applicant at the correspondence address indicated in Sec. 1.33. The
notice of allowance shall specify a sum constituting the issue fee which
must be paid within three months from the date of mailing of the notice
of allowance to avoid abandonment of the application. The sum specified
in the notice of allowance may also include the publication fee, in
which case the issue fee and publication fee (Sec. 1.211(e)) must both
be paid within three months from the date of mailing of the notice of
allowance to avoid abandonment of the application. This three-month
period is not extendable.
(b) An authorization to charge the issue or other post-allowance
fees set forth in Sec. 1.18 to a deposit account may be filed in an
individual application only after mailing of the notice of allowance.
The submission of either of the following after the mailing of a notice
of allowance will operate as a request to charge the correct issue fee
to any deposit account identified in a previously filed authorization to
charge fees:
(1) An incorrect issue fee; or
(2) A completed Office-provided issue fee transmittal form (where no
issue fee has been submitted).
[65 FR 57060, Sept. 20, 2000, as amended at 66 FR 67096, Dec. 28, 2001]
Sec. 1.312 Amendments after allowance.
No amendment may be made as a matter of right in an application
after the mailing of the notice of allowance. Any amendment filed
pursuant to this section must be filed before or with the payment of the
issue fee, and may be entered on the recommendation of the primary
examiner, approved by the Commissioner, without withdrawing the
application from issue.
[65 FR 14873, Mar. 20, 2000]
Sec. 1.313 Withdrawal from issue.
(a) Applications may be withdrawn from issue for further action at
the initiative of the Office or upon petition by the applicant. To
request that the Office withdraw an application from issue, applicant
must file a petition under this section including the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(h) and a showing of good and sufficient reasons why withdrawal
of the application from issue is necessary. A petition under this
section is not required if a request for continued examination under
Sec. 1.114 is filed prior to payment of the issue fee. If the Office
withdraws the application from issue, the Office will issue a new notice
of allowance if the Office again allows the application.
(b) Once the issue fee has been paid, the Office will not withdraw
the application from issue at its own initiative for any reason except:
(1) A mistake on the part of the Office;
(2) A violation of Sec. 1.56 or illegality in the application;
(3) Unpatentability of one or more claims; or
(4) For interference.
(c) Once the issue fee has been paid, the application will not be
withdrawn
[[Page 108]]
from issue upon petition by the applicant for any reason except:
(1) Unpatentability of one of more claims, which petition must be
accompanied by an unequivocal statement that one or more claims are
unpatentable, an amendment to such claim or claims, and an explanation
as to how the amendment causes such claim or claims to be patentable;
(2) Consideration of a request for continued examination in
compliance with Sec. 1.114; or
(3) Express abandonment of the application. Such express abandonment
may be in favor of a continuing application.
(d) A petition under this section will not be effective to withdraw
the application from issue unless it is actually received and granted by
the appropriate officials before the date of issue. Withdrawal of an
application from issue after payment of the issue fee may not be
effective to avoid publication of application information.
[65 FR 14873, Mar. 20, 2000, as amended at 65 FR 50105, Aug. 16, 2000]
Sec. 1.314 Issuance of patent.
If applicant timely pays the issue fee, the Office will issue the
patent in regular course unless the application is withdrawn from issue
(Sec. 1.313) or the Office defers issuance of the patent. To request
that the Office defer issuance of a patent, applicant must file a
petition under this section including the fee set forth in Sec. 1.17(h)
and a showing of good and sufficient reasons why it is necessary to
defer issuance of the patent.
[65 FR 54677, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.315 Delivery of patent.
The patent will be delivered or mailed upon issuance to the
correspondence address of record. See Sec. 1.33(a).
[61 FR 42807, Aug. 19, 1996]
Sec. 1.316 Application abandoned for failure to pay issue fee.
If the issue fee is not paid within three months from the date of
the notice of allowance, the application will be regarded as abandoned.
Such an abandoned application will not be considered as pending before
the Patent and Trademark Office.
[62 FR 53198, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.317 Lapsed patents; delayed payment of balance of issue fee.
If the issue fee paid is the amount specified in the notice of
allowance, but a higher amount is required at the time the issue fee is
paid, any remaining balance of the issue fee is to be paid within three
months from the date of notice thereof and, if not paid, the patent will
lapse at the termination of the three-month period.
[62 FR 53198, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.318 [Reserved]
Disclaimer
Sec. 1.321 Statutory disclaimers, including terminal disclaimers.
(a) A patentee owning the whole or any sectional interest in a
patent may disclaim any complete claim or claims in a patent. In like
manner any patentee may disclaim or dedicate to the public the entire
term, or any terminal part of the term, of the patent granted. Such
disclaimer is binding upon the grantee and its successors or assigns. A
notice of the disclaimer is published in the Official Gazette and
attached to the printed copies of the specification. The disclaimer, to
be recorded in the Patent and Trademark Office, must:
(1) Be signed by the patentee, or an attorney or agent of record;
(2) Identify the patent and complete claim or claims, or term being
disclaimed. A disclaimer which is not a disclaimer of a complete claim
or claims, or term will be refused recordation;
(3) State the present extent of patentee's ownership interest in the
patent; and
(4) Be accompanied by the fee set forth in Sec. 1.20(d).
(b) An applicant or assignee may disclaim or dedicate to the public
the entire term, or any terminal part of the term, of a patent to be
granted. Such terminal disclaimer is binding upon the grantee and its
successors or assigns. The terminal disclaimer, to be recorded in the
Patent and Trademark Office, must:
[[Page 109]]
(1) Be signed:
(i) By the applicant, or
(ii) If there is an assignee of record of an undivided part
interest, by the applicant and such assignee, or
(iii) If there is an assignee of record of the entire interest, by
such assignee, or
(iv) By an attorney or agent of record;
(2) Specify the portion of the term of the patent being disclaimed;
(3) State the present extent of applicant's or assignee's ownership
interest in the patent to be granted; and
(4) Be accompanied by the fee set forth in Sec. 1.20(d).
(c) A terminal disclaimer, when filed to obviate a judicially
created double patenting rejection in a patent application or in a
reexamination proceeding, must:
(1) Comply with the provisions of paragraphs (b)(2) through (b)(4)
of this section;
(2) Be signed in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of this section if
filed in a patent application or in accordance with paragraph (a)(1) of
this section if filed in a reexamination proceeding; and
(3) Include a provision that any patent granted on that application
or any patent subject to the reexamination proceeding shall be
enforceable only for and during such period that said patent is commonly
owned with the application or patent which formed the basis for the
rejection.
[58 FR 54510, Oct. 22, 1993, as amended at 61 FR 42807, Aug. 19, 1996]
Correction of Errors in Patent
Sec. 1.322 Certificate of correction of Office mistake.
(a)(1) The Commissioner may issue a certificate of correction
pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 254 to correct a mistake in a patent, incurred
through the fault of the Office, which mistake is clearly disclosed in
the records of the Office:
(i) At the request of the patentee or the patentee's assignee;
(ii) Acting sua sponte for mistakes that the Office discovers; or
(iii) Acting on information about a mistake supplied by a third
party.
(2)(i) There is no obligation on the Office to act on or respond to
a submission of information or request to issue a certificate of
correction by a third party under paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section.
(ii) Papers submitted by a third party under this section will not
be made of record in the file that they relate to nor be retained by the
Office.
(3) If the request relates to a patent involved in an interference,
the request must comply with the requirements of this section and be
accompanied by a motion under Sec. 1.635.
(4) The Office will not issue a certificate of correction under this
section without first notifying the patentee (including any assignee of
record) at the correspondence address of record as specified in
Sec. 1.33(a) and affording the patentee or an assignee an opportunity to
be heard.
(b) If the nature of the mistake on the part of the Office is such
that a certificate of correction is deemed inappropriate in form, the
Commissioner may issue a corrected patent in lieu thereof as a more
appropriate form for certificate of correction, without expense to the
patentee.
(35 U.S.C. 254)
[24 FR 10332, Dec. 22, 1959, as amended at 49 FR 48454, Dec. 12, 1984;
65 FR 54677, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.323 Certificate of correction of applicant's mistake.
The Office may issue a certificate of correction under the
conditions specified in 35 U.S.C. 255 at the request of the patentee or
the patentee's assignee, upon payment of the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.20(a). If the request relates to a patent involved in an
interference, the request must comply with the requirements of this
section and be accompanied by a motion under Sec. 1.635.
[65 FR 54677, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.324 Correction of inventorship in patent, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 256.
(a) Whenever through error a person is named in an issued patent as
the inventor, or through error an inventor is not named in an issued
patent and such
[[Page 110]]
error arose without any deceptive intention on his or her part, the
Commissioner may, on petition, or on order of a court before which such
matter is called in question, issue a certificate naming only the actual
inventor or inventors. A petition to correct inventorship of a patent
involved in an interference must comply with the requirements of this
section and must be accompanied by a motion under Sec. 1.634.
(b) Any petition pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section must be
accompanied by:
(1) Where one or more persons are being added, a statement from each
person who is being added as an inventor that the inventorship error
occurred without any deceptive intention on his or her part;
(2) A statement from the current named inventors who have not
submitted a statement under paragraph (b)(1) of this section either
agreeing to the change of inventorship or stating that they have no
disagreement in regard to the requested change;
(3) A statement from all assignees of the parties submitting a
statement under paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section agreeing to
the change of inventorship in the patent, which statement must comply
with the requirements of Sec. 3.73(b) of this chapter; and
(4) The fee set forth in Sec. 1.20(b).
(c) For correction of inventorship in an application see Secs. 1.48
and 1.497, and in an interference see Sec. 1.634.
[62 FR 53199, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 65 FR 54677, Sept. 8, 2000]
Sec. 1.325 Other mistakes not corrected.
Mistakes other than those provided for in Secs. 1.322, 1.323, 1.324,
and not affording legal grounds for reissue or for reexamination, will
not be corrected after the date of the patent.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2714, Jan. 20, 1983]
Arbitration Awards
Sec. 1.331-1.334 [Reserved]
Sec. 1.335 Filing of notice of arbitration awards.
(a) Written notice of any award by an arbitrator pursuant to 35
U.S.C. 294 must be filed in the Patent and Trademark Office by the
patentee, or the patentee's assignee or licensee. If the award involves
more than one patent a separate notice must be filed for placement in
the file of each patent. The notice must set forth the patent number,
the names of the inventor and patent owner, and the names and addresses
of the parties to the arbitration. The notice must also include a copy
of the award.
(b) If an award by an arbitrator pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 294 is
modified by a court, the party requesting the modification must file in
the Patent and Trademark Office, a notice of the modification for
placement in the file of each patent to which the modification applies.
The notice must set forth the patent number, the names of the inventor
and patent owner, and the names and addresses of the parties to the
arbitration. The notice must also include a copy of the court's order
modifying the award.
(c) Any award by an arbitrator pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 294 shall be
unenforceable until any notices required by paragraph (a) or (b) of this
section are filed in the Patent and Trademark Office. If any required
notice is not filed by the party designated in paragraph (a) or (b)
[[Page 111]]
of this section, any party to the arbitration proceeding may file such a
notice.
(35 U.S.C. 6, Pub. L. 97-247)
[48 FR 2714, Jan. 20, 1983]
Amendment of Rules
Sec. 1.351 Amendments to rules will be published.
All amendments to the regulations in this part will be published in
the Official Gazette and in the Federal Register.
Sec. 1.352 [Reserved]
Maintenance Fees
Sec. 1.362 Time for payment of maintenance fees.
(a) Maintenance fees as set forth in Secs. 1.20 (e) through (g) are
required to be paid in all patents based on applications filed on or
after December 12, 1980, except as noted in paragraph (b) of this
section, to maintain a patent in force beyond 4, 8 and 12 years after
the date of grant.
(b) Maintenance fees are not required for any plant patents or for
any design patents. Maintenance fees are not required for a reissue
patent if the patent being reissued did not require maintenance fees.
(c) The application filing dates for purposes of payment of
maintenance fees are as follows:
(1) For an application not claiming benefit of an earlier
application, the actual United States filing date of the application.
(2) For an application claiming benefit of an earlier foreign
application under 35 U.S.C. 119, the United States filing date of the
application.
(3) For a continuing (continuation, division, continuation-in-part)
application claiming the benefit of a prior patent application under 35
U.S.C. 120, the actual United States filing date of the continuing
application.
(4) For a reissue application, including a continuing reissue
application claiming the benefit of a reissue application under 35
U.S.C. 120, United States filing date of the original non-reissue
application on which the patent reissued is based.
(5) For an international application which has entered the United
States as a Designated Office under 35 U.S.C. 371, the international
filing date granted under Article 11(1) of the Patent Cooperation Treaty
which is considered to be the United States filing date under 35 U.S.C.
363.
(d) Maintenance fees may be paid in patents without surcharge during
the periods extending respectively from:
(1) 3 years through 3 years and 6 months after grant for the first
maintenance fee,
(2) 7 years through 7 years and 6 months after grant for the second
maintenance fee, and
(3) 11 years through 11 years and 6 months after grant for the third
maintenance fee.
(e) Maintenance fees may be paid with the surcharge set forth in
Sec. 1.20(h) during the respective grace periods after:
(1) 3 years and 6 months and through the day of the 4th anniversary
of the grant for the first maintenance fee.
(2) 7 years and 6 months and through the day of the 8th anniversary
of the grant for the second maintenance fee, and
(3) 11 years and 6 months and through the day of the 12th
anniversary of the grant for the third maintenance fee.
(f) If the last day for paying a maintenance fee without surcharge
set forth in paragraph (d) of this section, or the last day for paying a
maintenance fee with surcharge set forth in paragraph (e) of this
section, falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or a federal holiday within the
District of Columbia, the maintenance fee and any necessary surcharge
may be paid under paragraph (d) or paragraph (e) respectively on the
next succeeding day which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday.
(g) Unless the maintenance fee and any applicable surcharge is paid
within the time periods set forth in paragraphs (d), (e) or (f) of this
section, the patent will expire as of the end of the grace period set
forth in paragraph (e) of this section. A patent which expires for the
failure to pay the maintenance fee will expire at the end of the same
date (anniversary date) the patent was granted in the 4th, 8th, or 12th
year after grant.
[[Page 112]]
(h) The periods specified in Secs. 1.362 (d) and (e) with respect to
a reissue application, including a continuing reissue application
thereof, are counted from the date of grant of the original non-reissue
application on which the reissued patent is based.
[49 FR 34724, Aug. 31, 1984, as amended at 56 FR 65154, Dec. 13, 1991;
58 FR 54511, Oct. 22, 1993]
Sec. 1.363 Fee address for maintenance fee purposes.
(a) All notices, receipts, refunds, and other communications
relating to payment or refund of maintenance fees will be directed to
the correspondence address used during prosecution of the application as
indicated in Sec. 1.33(a) unless:
(1) A fee address for purposes of payment of maintenance fees is set
forth when submitting the issue fee, or
(2) A change in the correspondence address for all purposes is filed
after payment of the issue fee, or
(3) A fee address or a change in the ``fee address'' is filed for
purposes of receiving notices, receipts and other correspondence
relating to the payment of maintenance fees after the payment of the
issue fee, in which instance, the latest such address will be used.
(b) An assignment of a patent application or patent does not result
in a change of the ``correspondence address'' or ``fee address'' for
maintenance fee purposes.
[49 FR 34725, Aug. 31, 1984]
Sec. 1.366 Submission of maintenance fees.
(a) The patentee may pay maintenance fees and any necessary
surcharges, or any person or organization may pay maintenance fees and
any necessary surcharges on behalf of a patentee. Authorization by the
patentee need not be filed in the Patent and Trademark Office to pay
maintenance fees and any necessary surcharges on behalf of the patentee.
(b) A maintenance fee and any necessary surcharge submitted for a
patent must be submitted in the amount due on the date the maintenance
fee and any necessary surcharge are paid. A maintenance fee or surcharge
may be paid in the manner set forth in Sec. 1.23 or by an authorization
to charge a deposit account established pursuant to Sec. 1.25. Payment
of a maintenance fee and any necessary surcharge or the authorization to
charge a deposit account must be submitted within the periods set forth
in Sec. 1.362 (d), (e), or (f). Any payment or authorization of
maintenance fees and surcharges filed at any other time will not be
accepted and will not serve as a payment of the maintenance fee except
insofar as a delayed payment of the maintenance fee is accepted by the
Commissioner in an expired patent pursuant to a petition filed under
Sec. 1.378. Any authorization to charge a deposit account must authorize
the immediate charging of the maintenance fee and any necessary
surcharge to the deposit account. Payment of less than the required
amount, payment in a manner other than that set forth Sec. 1.23, or in
the filing of an authorization to charge a deposit account having
insufficient funds will not constitute payment of a maintenance fee or
surcharge on a patent. The procedures set forth in Sec. 1.8 or Sec. 1.10
may be utilized in paying maintenance fees and any necessary surcharges.
(c) In submitting maintenance fees and any necessary surcharges,
identification of the patents for which maintenance fees are being paid
must include the patent number, and the application number of the United
States application for the patent on which the maintenance fee is being
paid. If the payment includes identification of only the patent number
(i.e., does not identify the application number of the United States
application for the patent on which the maintenance fee is being paid),
the Office may apply the payment to the patent identified by patent
number in the payment or may return the payment.
(d) Payment of maintenance fees and any surcharges should identify
the fee being paid for each patent as to whether it is the 3\1/2\-, 7\1/
2\-, or 11\1/2\-year fee, whether small entity status is being changed
or claimed, the amount of the maintenance fee and any surcharge being
paid, and any assigned customer number. If the maintenance fee and any
necessary surcharge is being paid on a reissue patent, the payment must
identify the reissue patent by reissue
[[Page 113]]
patent number and reissue application number as required by paragraph
(c) of this section and should also include the original patent number.
(e) Maintenance fee payments and surcharge payments relating thereto
must be submitted separate from any other payments for fees or charges,
whether submitted in the manner set forth in Sec. 1.23 or by an
authorization to charge a deposit account. If maintenance fee and
surcharge payments for more than one patent are submitted together, they
should be submitted on as few sheets as possible with the patent numbers
listed in increasing patent number order. If the payment submitted is
insufficient to cover the maintenance fees and surcharges for all the
listed patents, the payment will be applied in the order the patents are
listed, beginning at the top of the listing.
(f) Notification of any change in status resulting in loss of
entitlement to small entity status must be filed in a patent prior to
paying, or at the time of paying, the earliest maintenance fee due after
the date on which status as a small entity is no longer appropriate. See
Sec. 1.27(g).
(g) Maintenance fees and surcharges relating thereto will not be
refunded except in accordance with Secs. 1.26 and 1.28(a).
[49 FR 34725, Aug. 31, 1984, as amended at 58 FR 54503, Oct. 22, 1993;
62 FR 53199, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 54677, Sept. 8, 2000; 65 FR 78960,
Dec. 18, 2000]
Sec. 1.377 Review of decision refusing to accept and record payment of a maintenance fee filed prior to expiration of patent.
(a) Any patentee who is dissatisfied with the refusal of the Patent
and Trademark Office to accept and record a maintenance fee which was
filed prior to the expiration of the patent may petition the
Commissioner to accept and record the maintenance fee.
(b) Any petition under this section must be filed within 2 months of
the action complained of, or within such other time as may be set in the
action complained of, and must be accompanied by the fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(h). The petition may include a request that the petition fee
be refunded if the refusal to accept and record the maintenance fee is
determined to result from an error by the Patent and Trademark Office.
(c) Any petition filed under this section must comply with the
requirements of Sec. 1.181(b) and must be signed by an attorney or agent
registered to practice before the Patent and Trademark Office, or by the
patentee, the assignee, or other party in interest.
[49 FR 34725, Aug. 31, 1984, as amended at 62 FR 53199, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.378 Acceptance of delayed payment of maintenance fee in expired patent to reinstate patent.
(a) The Commissioner may accept the payment of any maintenance fee
due on a patent after expiration of the patent if, upon petition, the
delay in payment of the maintenance fee is shown to the satisfaction of
the Commissioner to have been unavoidable (paragraph (b) of this
section) or unintentional (paragraph (c) of this section) and if the
surcharge required by Sec. 1.20(i) is paid as a condition of accepting
payment of the maintenance fee. If the Commissioner accepts payment of
the maintenance fee upon petition, the patent shall be considered as not
having expired, but will be subject to the conditions set forth in 35
U.S.C. 41(c)(2).
(b) Any petition to accept an unavoidably delayed payment of a
maintenance fee filed under paragraph (a) of this section must include:
(1) The required maintenance fee set forth in Sec. 1.20 (e) through
(g);
(2) The surcharge set forth in Sec. 1.20(i)(1); and
(3) A showing that the delay was unavoidable since reasonable care
was taken to ensure that the maintenance fee would be paid timely and
that the petition was filed promptly after the patentee was notified of,
or otherwise became aware of, the expiration of the patent. The showing
must enumerate the steps taken to ensure timely payment of the
maintenance fee, the date and the manner in which patentee became aware
of the expiration of the patent, and the steps taken to file the
petition promptly.
(c) Any petition to accept an unintentionally delayed payment of a
maintenance fee filed under paragraph
[[Page 114]]
(a) of this section must be filed within twenty-four months after the
six-month grace period provided in Sec. 1.362(e) and must include:
(1) The required maintenance fee set forth in Sec. 1.20 (e) through
(g);
(2) The surcharge set forth in Sec. 1.20(i)(2); and
(3) A statement that the delay in payment of the maintenance fee was
unintentional.
(d) Any petition under this section must be signed by an attorney or
agent registered to practice before the Patent and Trademark Office, or
by the patentee, the assignee, or other party in interest.
(e) Reconsideration of a decision refusing to accept a maintenance
fee upon petition filed pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section may be
obtained by filing a petition for reconsideration within two months of,
or such other time as set in, the decision refusing to accept the
delayed payment of the maintenance fee. Any such petition for
reconsideration must be accompanied by the petition fee set forth in
Sec. 1.17(h). After decision on the petition for reconsideration, no
further reconsideration or review of the matter will be undertaken by
the Commissioner. If the delayed payment of the maintenance fee is not
accepted, the maintenance fee and the surcharge set forth in
Sec. 1.20(i) will be refunded following the decision on the petition for
reconsideration, or after the expiration of the time for filing such a
petition for reconsideration, if none is filed. Any petition fee under
this section will not be refunded unless the refusal to accept and
record the maintenance fee is determined to result from an error by the
Patent and Trademark Office.
[49 FR 34726, Aug. 31, 1984, as amended at 50 FR 9383, Mar. 7, 1985; 58
FR 44282, Aug. 20, 1993; 62 FR 53199, Oct. 10, 1997]
Subpart C--International Processing Provisions
Authority: Pub. L. 94-131, 89 Stat. 685; Pub. L. 99-616, 35 U.S.C.
351 through 376.
Source: 43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, unless otherwise noted.
General Information
Sec. 1.401 Definitions of terms under the Patent Cooperation Treaty.
(a) The abbreviation PCT and the term Treaty mean the Patent
Cooperation Treaty.
(b) International Bureau means the World Intellectual Property
Organization located in Geneva, Switzerland.
(c) Administrative Instructions means that body of instructions for
operating under the Patent Cooperation Treaty referred to in PCT Rule
89.
(d) Request, when capitalized, means that element of the
international application described in PCT Rules 3 and 4.
(e) International application, as used in this subchapter is defined
in Sec. 1.9(b).
(f) Priority date for the purpose of computing time limits under the
Patent Cooperation Treaty is defined in PCT Art. 2 (xi). Note also
Sec. 1.465.
(g) Demand, when capitalized, means that document filed with the
International Preliminary Examining Authority which requests an
international preliminary examination.
(h) Annexes means amendments made to the claims, description or the
drawings before the International Preliminary Examining Authority.
(i) Other terms and expressions in this subpart C not defined in
this section are to be taken in the sense indicated in PCT Art. 2 and 35
U.S.C. 351.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 52 FR 20047, May 28, 1987]
Sec. 1.412 The United States Receiving Office.
(a) The United States Patent and Trademark Office is a Receiving
Office only for applicants who are residents or nationals of the United
States of America.
(b) The Patent and Trademark Office, when acting as a Receiving
Office, will be identified by the full title ``United States Receiving
Office'' or by the abbreviation ``RO/US.''
(c) The major functions of the Receiving Office include:
(1) According of international filing dates to international
applications meeting the requirements of PCT Art. 11(1), and PCT Rule
20;
[[Page 115]]
(2) Assuring that international applications meet the standards for
format and content of PCT Art. 14(1), PCT Rule 9, 26, 29.1, 37, 38, 91,
and portions of PCT Rules 3 through 11;
(3) Collecting and, when required, transmitting fees due for
processing international applications (PCT Rule 14, 15, 16);
(4) Transmitting the record and search copies to the International
Bureau and International Searching Authority, respectively (PCT Rules 22
and 23); and
(5) Determining compliance with applicable requirements of part 5 of
this chapter.
(6) Reviewing and, unless prescriptions concerning national security
prevent the application from being so transmitted (PCT Rule 19.4),
transmitting the international application to the International Bureau
for processing in its capacity as a Receiving Office:
(i) Where the United States Receiving Office is not the competent
Receiving Office under PCT Rule 19.1 or 19.2 and Sec. 1.421(a); or
(ii) Where the international application is not in English but is in
a language accepted under PCT Rule 12.1(a) by the International Bureau
as a Receiving Office; or
(iii) Where there is agreement and authorization in accordance with
PCT Rule 19.4(a)(iii).
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 60 FR 21439, May 2, 1995; 63
FR 29617, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.413 The United States International Searching Authority.
(a) Pursuant to appointment by the Assembly, the United States
Patent and Trademark Office will act as an International Searching
Authority for international applications filed in the United States
Receiving Office and in other Receiving Offices as may be agreed upon by
the Commissioner, in accordance with agreement between the Patent and
Trademark Office and the International Bureau (PCT Art. 16(3)(b)).
(b) The Patent and Trademark Office, when acting as an International
Searching Authority, will be identified by the full title ``United
States International Searching Authority'' or by the abbreviation ``ISA/
US.''
(c) The major functions of the International Searching Authority
include:
(1) Approving or establishing the title and abstract;
(2) Considering the matter of unity of invention;
(3) Conducting international and international-type searches and
preparing international and international-type search reports (PCT Art.
15, 17 and 18, and PCT Rules 25, 33 to 45 and 47); and
(4) Transmitting the international search report to the applicant
and the International Bureau.
Sec. 1.414 The United States Patent and Trademark Office as a Designated Office or Elected Office.
(a) The United States Patent and Trademark Office will act as a
Designated Office or Elected Office for international applications in
which the United States of America has been designated or elected as a
State in which patent protection is desired.
(b) The United States Patent and Trademark Office, when acting as a
Designated Office or Elected Office during international processing will
be identified by the full title ``United States Designated Office'' or
by the abbreviation ``DO/US'' or by the full title ``United States
Elected Office'' or by the abbreviation ``EO/US''.
(c) The major functions of the United States Designated Office or
Elected Office in respect to international applications in which the
United States of America has been designated or elected, include:
(1) Receiving various notifications throughout the international
stage and
(2) Accepting for national stage examination international
applications which satisfy the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 371.
[52 FR 20047, May 28, 1987]
Sec. 1.415 The International Bureau.
(a) The International Bureau is the World Intellectual Property
Organization located at Geneva, Switzerland. It is the international
intergovernmental organization which acts as the coordinating body under
the Treaty and the
[[Page 116]]
Regulations (PCT Art. 2 (xix) and 35 U.S.C. 351 (h)).
(b) The major functions of the International Bureau include:
(1) Publishing of international applications and the International
Gazette;
(2) Transmitting copies of international applications to Designated
Offices;
(3) Storing and maintaining record copies; and
(4) Transmitting information to authorities pertinent to the
processing of specific international applications.
Sec. 1.416 The United States International Preliminary Examining Authority.
(a) Pursuant to appointment by the Assembly, the United States
Patent and Trademark Office will act as an International Preliminary
Examining Authority for international applications filed in the United
States Receiving Office and in other Receiving Offices as may be agreed
upon by the Commissioner, in accordance with agreement between the
Patent and Trademark Office and the International Bureau.
(b) The United States Patent and Trademark Office, when acting as an
International Preliminary Examining Authority, will be identified by the
full title ``United States International Preliminary Examining
Authority'' or by the abbreviation ``IPEA/US.''
(c) The major functions of the International Preliminary Examining
Authority include:
(1) Receiving and checking for defects in the Demand;
(2) Forwarding Demands in accordance with PCT Rule 59.3;
(3) Collecting the handling fee for the International Bureau and the
preliminary examination fee for the United States International
Preliminary Examining Authority;
(4) Informing applicant of receipt of the Demand;
(5) Considering the matter of unity of invention;
(6) Providing an international preliminary examination report which
is a non-binding opinion on the questions of whether the claimed
invention appears: to be novel, to involve an inventive step (to be
nonobvious), and to be industrially applicable; and
(7) Transmitting the international preliminary examination report to
applicant and the International Bureau.
[52 FR 20047, May 28, 1987, as amended at 63 FR 29617, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.417 Submission of translation of international publication.
The submission of the international publication or an English
language translation of an international application pursuant to 35
U.S.C. 154(d)(4) must clearly identify the international application to
which it pertains (Sec. 1.5(a)) and, unless it is being submitted
pursuant to Sec. 1.495, be clearly identified as a submission pursuant
to 35 U.S.C. 154(d)(4). Otherwise, the submission will be treated as a
filing under 35 U.S.C. 111(a). Such submissions should be marked ``Box
PCT.''
[67 FR 523, Jan. 4, 2002]
Sec. 1.419 Display of currently valid control number under the Paperwork Reduction Act.
(a) Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.), the collection of information in this subpart has been
reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget under
control number 0651-0021.
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is
required to respond to nor shall a person be subject to a penalty for
failure to comply with a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act unless that collection of
information displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget
control number. This section constitutes the display required by 44
U.S.C. 3512(a) and 5 CFR 1320.5(b)(2)(i) for the collection of
information under Office of Management and Budget control number 0651-
0021 (see 5 CFR 1320.5(b)(2)(ii)(D)).
[63 FR 29617, June 1, 1998]
Who May File an International Application
Sec. 1.421 Applicant for international application.
(a) Only residents or nationals of the United States of America may
file
[[Page 117]]
international applications in the United States Receiving Office. If an
international application does not include an applicant who is indicated
as being a resident or national of the United States of America, and at
least one applicant:
(1) Has indicated a residence or nationality in a PCT Contracting
State, or
(2) Has no residence or nationality indicated; applicant will be so
notified and, if the international application includes a fee amount
equivalent to that required by Sec. 1.445(a)(5), the international
application will be forwarded for processing to the International Bureau
acting as a Receiving Office. (See also Sec. 1.412(c)(6).)
(b) Although the United States Receiving Office will accept
international applications filed by any resident or national of the
United States of America for international processing, an international
application designating the United States of America will be accepted by
the Patent and Trademark Office for the national stage only if filed by
the inventor or as provided in Sec. 1.422, 1.423 or Sec. 1.425.
(c) International applications which do not designate the United
States of America may be filed by the assignee or owner.
(d) The attorney or agent of the applicant may sign the
international application Request and file the international application
for the applicant if the international application when filed is
accompanied by a separate power of attorney to that attorney or agent
from the applicant. The separate power of attorney from the applicant
may be submitted after filing if sufficient cause is shown for not
submitting it at the time of filing. Note that paragraph (b) of this
section requires that the applicant be the inventor if the United States
of America is designated.
(e) Any indication of different applicants for the purpose of
different Designated Offices must be shown on the Request portion of the
international application.
(f) Changes in the person, name, or address of the applicant of an
international application shall be made in accordance with PCT Rule
92bis.
(g) The wording of PCT Rule 92bis is as follows:
PCT Rule 92bis--Recording of Changes in Certain Indications in the
Request or the Demand
92bis Recording of Changes by the International Bureau
(a) The International Bureau shall, on the request of the applicant
or the receiving Office, record changes in the following indications
appearing in the request or demand:
(i) Person name, residence, nationality or address of the applicant,
(ii) Person, name or address of the agent, the common representative
or the inventor.
(b) The International Bureau shall not record the requested change
if the request for recording is received by it after the expiration:
(i) Of the time limit referred to in Article 22(1), where Article
39(1) is not applicable with respect to any Contracting State;
(ii) Of the time limit referred to in Article 39(1)(a), where
Article 39(1) is applicable with respect to at least one Contracting
State.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 53 FR 47810, Nov. 28, 1988; 60
FR 21440, May 2, 1995]
Sec. 1.422 When the inventor is dead.
In case of the death of the inventor, the legal representative
(executor, administrator, etc.) of the deceased inventor may file an
international application which designates the United States of America.
Sec. 1.423 When the inventor is insane or legally incapacitated.
In case an inventor is insane or otherwise legally incapacitated,
the legal representative (guardian, conservator, etc.) of such inventor
may file an international application which designates the United States
of America.
Sec. 1.424 Joint inventors.
Joint inventors must jointly file an international application which
designates the United States of America; the signature of either of them
alone, or less than the entire number will be insufficient for an
invention invented by them jointly, except as provided in Sec. 1.425.
Sec. 1.425 Filing by other than inventor.
Where an international application which designates the United
States of America is filed and where one or more
[[Page 118]]
inventors refuse to sign the Request for the international application
or cannot be found or reached after diligent effort, the Request need
not be signed by such inventor if it is signed by another applicant.
Such international application must be accompanied by a statement
explaining to the satisfaction of the Commissioner the lack of the
signature concerned.
[62 FR 53199, Oct. 10, 1997]
The International Application
Sec. 1.431 International application requirements.
(a) An international application shall contain, as specified in the
Treaty and the Regulations, a Request, a description, one or more
claims, an abstract, and one or more drawings (where required). (PCT
Art. 3(2) and section 207 of the Administrative Instructions.)
(b) An international filing date will be accorded by the United
States Receiving Office, at the time to receipt of the international
application, provided that:
(1) At least one applicant (Sec. 1.421) is a United States resident
or national and the papers filed at the time of receipt of the
international application so indicate (35 U.S.C. 361(a), PCT Art.
11(1)(i)).
(2) The international application is in the English language (35
U.S.C. 361(c), PCT Art. 11(1)(ii)).
(3) The international application contains at least the following
elements (PCT Art. 11(1)(iii)):
(i) An indication that it is intended as an international
application (PCT Rule 4.2);
(ii) The designation of at least one Contracting State of the
International Patent Cooperation Union (Sec. 1.432);
(iii) The name of the applicant, as perscribed (note Secs. 1.421-
1.424);
(iv) A part which on the face of it appears to be a description; and
(v) A part which on the face of it appears to be a claim.
(c) Payment of the basic portion of the international fee (PCT Rule
15.2) and the transmittal and search fees (Sec. 1.445) may be made in
full at the time the international application papers required by
paragraph (b) of this section are deposited or within one month
thereafter. The basic, transmittal, and search fee payable is the basic,
transmittal, and search fee in effect on the receipt date of the
international application.
(1) If the basic, transmittal and search fees are not paid within
one month from the date of receipt of the international application and
prior to the sending of a notice of deficiency, applicant will be
notified and given one month within which to pay the deficient fees plus
a late payment fee equal to the greater of:
(i) Fifty percent of the amount of the deficient fees up to a
maximum amount equal to the basic fee; or
(ii) An amount equal to the transmittal fee (PCT Rule 16bis).
(2) The one-month time limit set pursuant to this paragraph to pay
deficient fees may not be extended.
(d) If the payment needed to cover the transmittal fee, the basic
fee, the search fee, one designation fee and the late payment fee
pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section is not timely made in
accordance with PCT Rule 16bis.1(e), the Receiving Office will declare
the international application withdrawn under PCT Article 14(3)(a).
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 50 FR 9383, Mar. 7, 1985; 52
FR 20047, May 28, 1987; 58 FR 4344, Jan. 14, 1993; 63 FR 29618, June 1,
1998]
Sec. 1.432 Designation of States and payment of designation and confirmation fees.
(a) The designation of States including an indication that applicant
wishes to obtain a regional patent, where applicable, shall appear in
the Request upon filing and must be indicated as set forth in PCT Rule
4.9 and section 115 of the Administrative Instructions. Applicant must
specify at least one national or regional designation on filing of the
international application for a filing date to be granted.
(b) If the fees necessary to cover all the national and regional
designations specified in the Request are not paid by the applicant
within one year from the priority date or within one month from the date
of receipt of the international application if that month expires after
the expiration of one year from the priority date, applicant will be
notified
[[Page 119]]
and given one month within which to pay the deficient designation fees
plus a late payment fee. The late payment fee shall be equal to the
greater of fifty percent of the amount of the deficient fees up to a
maximum amount equal to the basic fee, or an amount equal to the
transmittal fee (PCT Rule 16bis). The one-month time limit set in the
notification of deficient designation fees may not be extended. Failure
to timely pay at least one designation fee will result in the withdrawal
of the international application.
(1) The one designation fee must be paid:
(i) Within one year from the priority date;
(ii) Within one month from the date of receipt of the international
application if that month expires after the expiration of one year from
the priority date; or
(iii) With the late payment fee defined in this paragraph within the
time set in the notification of the deficient designation fees or in
accordance with PCT Rule 16bis.1(e).
(2) If after a notification of deficient designation fees the
applicant makes timely payment, but the amount paid is not sufficient to
cover the late payment fee and all designation fees, the Receiving
Office will, after allocating payment for the basic, search, transmittal
and late payment fees, allocate the amount paid in accordance with PCT
Rule 16bis.1(c) and withdraw the unpaid designations. The notification
of deficient designation fees pursuant to this paragraph may be made
simultaneously with any notification pursuant to Sec. 1.431(c).
(c) The amount payable for the designation fee set forth in
paragraph (b) is:
(1) The designation fee in effect on the filing date of the
international application, if such fee is paid in full within one month
from the date of receipt of the international application;
(2) The designation fee in effect on the date such fee is paid in
full, if such fee is paid in full later than one month from the date of
receipt of the international application but within one year from the
priority date;
(3) The designation fee in effect on the date one year from the
priority date, if the fee was due one year from the priority date, and
such fee is paid in full later than one month from the date of receipt
of the international application and later than one year from the
priority date; or
(4) The designation fee in effect on the international filing date,
if the fee was due one month from the international filing date and
after one year from the priority date, and such fee is paid in full
later than one month from the date of receipt of the international
application and later than one year from the priority date.
(d) On filing the international application, in addition to
specifying at least one national or regional designation under PCT Rule
4.9(a), applicant may also indicate under PCT Rule 4.9(b) that all other
designations permitted under the Treaty are made.
(1) Indication of other designations permitted by the Treaty under
PCT Rule 4.9(b) must be made in a statement on the Request that any
designation made under this paragraph is subject to confirmation (PCT
Rule 4.9(c)) not later than the expiration of 15 months from the
priority date by:
(i) Filing a written notice with the United States Receiving Office
specifying the national and/or regional designations being confirmed;
(ii) Paying the designation fee for each designation being
confirmed; and
(iii) Paying the confirmation fee specified in Sec. 1.445(a)(4).
(2) Unconfirmed designations will be considered withdrawn. If the
amount submitted is not sufficient to cover the designation fee and the
confirmation fee for each designation being confirmed, the Receiving
Office will allocate the amount paid in accordance with any priority of
designations specified by applicant. If applicant does not specify any
priority of designations, the allocation of the amount paid will be made
in accordance with PCT Rule 16bis.1(c).
[58 FR 4344, Jan. 14, 1993, as amended at 63 FR 29618, June 1, 1998]
[[Page 120]]
Sec. 1.433 Physical requirements of international application.
(a) The international application and each of the documents that may
be referred to in the check list of the Request (PCT Rule 3.3(a)(ii))
shall be filed in one copy only.
(b) All sheets of the international application must be on A4 size
paper (21.0 x 29.7 cm.).
(c) Other physical requirements for international applications are
set forth in PCT Rule 11 and sections 201-207 of the Administrative
Instructions.
Sec. 1.434 The request.
(a) The request shall be made on a standardized form (PCT Rules 3
and 4). Copies of printed Request forms are available from the Patent
and Trademark Office. Letters requesting printed forms should be marked
``Box PCT.''
(b) The Check List portion of the Request form should indicate each
document accompanying the international application on filing.
(c) All information, for example, addresses, names of States and
dates, shall be indicated in the Request as required by PCT Rule 4 and
Administrative Instructions 110 and 201.
(d) International applications which designate the United States of
America:
(1) Shall include the name, address and signature of the inventor,
except as provided by Secs. 1.421(d), 1.422, 1.423 and 1.425;
(2) A reference to any prior-filed national application or
international application designating the United States of America, if
the benefit of the filing date for the prior-filed application is to be
claimed.
(3) May include in the Request a declaration of the inventors as
provided for in PCT Rule 4.17(iv).
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 58 FR 4345, Jan. 14, 1993; 66
FR 16006, Mar. 22, 2001; 66 FR 67096, Dec. 28, 2001]
Sec. 1.435 The description.
(a) The application must meet the requirements as to the content and
form of the description set forth in PCT Rules 5, 9, 10, and 11 and
sections 204 and 208 of the Administrative Instructions.
(b) In international applications designating the United States the
description must contain upon filing an indication of the best mode
contemplated by the inventor for carrying out the claimed invention.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 63 FR 29618, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.436 The claims.
The requirements as to the content and format of claims are set
forth in PCT Art. 6 and PCT Rules 6, 9, 10 and 11 and shall be adhered
to. The number of the claims shall be reasonable, considering the nature
of the invention claimed.
Sec. 1.437 The drawings.
(a) Subject to paragraph (b) of this section, when drawings are
necessary for the understanding of the invention, or are mentioned in
the description, they must be part of an international application as
originally filed in the United States Receiving Office in order to
maintain the international filing date during the national stage (PCT
Art. 7).
(b) Drawings missing from the application upon filing will be
accepted if such drawings are received within 30 days of the date of
first receipt of the incomplete papers. If the missing drawings are
received within the 30-day period, the international filing date shall
be the date on which such drawings are received. If such drawings are
not timely received, all references to drawings in the international
application shall be considered non-existent (PCT Art. 14(2),
Administrative Instruction 310).
(c) The physical requirements for drawings are set forth in PCT Rule
11 and shall be adhered to.
Sec. 1.438 The abstract.
(a) Requirements as to the content and form of the abstract are set
forth in PCT Rule 8, and shall be adhered to.
(b) Lack of an abstract upon filing of an international application
will not affect the granting of a filing date. However, failure to
furnish an abstract within one month from the date of the notification
by the Receiving Office will result in the international appplication
being declared withdrawn.
[[Page 121]]
Fees
Sec. 1.445 International application filing, processing and search fees.
(a) The following fees and charges for international applications
are established by the Commissioner under the authority of 35 U.S.C.
376:
(1) A transmittal fee (see 35 U.S.C. 361(d) and PCT Rule 14)--
$240.00
(2) A search fee (see 35 U.S.C. 361(d) and PCT Rule 16):
(i) Where a corresponding prior United States National application
filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) with the filing fee under Sec. 1.16(a) has
been filed-- 450.00
(ii) For all situations not provided for in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of
this section--700.00
(3) A supplemental search fee when required, per additional
invention--210.00
(4) A confirmation fee (PCT Rule 96) equal to fifty percent of the
sum of designation fees for the national and regional designations being
confirmed (Sec. 1.432(d)).
(5) A fee equivalent to the transmittal fee in paragraph (a)(1) of
this section for transmittal of an international application to the
International Bureau for processing in its capacity as a Receiving
Office (PCT Rule 19.4).
(b) The basic fee and designation fee portions of the international
fee shall be prescribed in PCT Rule 15.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 52 FR 20047, May 28, 1987; 54
FR 9432, Mar. 7, 1989; 60 FR 41023, Aug. 11, 1995; 61 FR 39588, July 30,
1996; 63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.446 Refund of international application filing and processing fees.
(a) Money paid for international application fees, where paid by
actual mistake or in excess, such as a payment not required by law or
treaty and its regulations, may be refunded. A mere change of purpose
after the payment of a fee will not entitle a party to a refund of such
fee. The Office will not refund amounts of twenty-five dollars or less
unless a refund is specifically requested and will not notify the payor
of such amounts. If the payor or party requesting a refund does not
provide the banking information necessary for making refunds by
electronic funds transfer, the Office may use the banking information
provided on the payment instrument to make any refund by electronic
funds transfer.
(b) Any request for refund under paragraph (a) of this section must
be filed within two years from the date the fee was paid. If the Office
charges a deposit account by an amount other than an amount specifically
indicated in an authorization under Sec. 1.25(b), any request for refund
based upon such charge must be filed within two years from the date of
the deposit account statement indicating such charge and include a copy
of that deposit account statement. The time periods set forth in this
paragraph are not extendable.
(c) Refund of the supplemental search fees will be made if such
refund is determined to be warranted by the Commissioner or the
Commissioner's designee acting under PCT Rule 40.2(c).
(d) The international and search fees will be refunded if no
international filing date is accorded or if the application is withdrawn
before transmittal of the record copy to the International Bureau (PCT
Rules 15.6 and 16.2). The search fee will be refunded if the application
is withdrawn before transmittal of the search copy to the International
Searching Authority. The transmittal fee will not be refunded.
(e) The handling fee (Sec. 1.482(b)) will be refunded (PCT Rule
57.6) only if:
(1) The Demand is withdrawn before the Demand has been sent by the
International Preliminary Examining Authority to the International
Bureau, or
(2) The Demand is considered not to have been submitted (PCT Rule
54.4(a)).
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 50 FR 9384, Mar. 7, 1985; 50
FR 31826, Aug. 6, 1985; 58 FR 4345, Jan. 14, 1993; 65 FR 54677, Sept. 8,
2000]
Priority
Sec. 1.451 The priority claim and priority document in an international application.
(a) The claim for priority must, subject to paragraph (d) of this
section, be made on the Request (PCT Rule 4.10) in a manner complying
with sections 110
[[Page 122]]
and 115 of the Administrative Instructions.
(b) Whenever the priority of an earlier United States national
application or international application filed with the United States
Receiving Office is claimed in an international application, the
applicant may request in the Request or in a letter of transmittal
accompanying the international application upon filing with the United
States Receiving Office or in a separate letter filed in the United
States Receiving Office not later than 16 months after the priority
date, that the United States Patent and Trademark Office prepare a
certified copy of the prior application for transmittal to the
International Bureau (PCT Article 8 and PCT Rule 17). The fee for
preparing a certified copy is set forth in Sec. 1.19(b)(1).
(c) If a certified copy of the priority document is not submitted
together with the international application on filing, or, if the
priority application was filed in the United States and a request and
appropriate payment for preparation of such a certified copy do not
accompany the international application on filing or are not filed
within 16 months of the priority date, the certified copy of the
priority document must be furnished by the applicant to the
International Bureau or to the United States Receiving Office within the
time limit specified in PCT Rule 17.1(a).
(d) The applicant may correct or add a priority claim in accordance
with PCT Rule 26bis.1.
(35 U.S.C. 6; 15 U.S.C. 1113, 1123)
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 50 FR 9384, Mar. 7, 1985; 50
FR 11366, Mar. 21, 1985; 54 FR 6903, Feb. 15, 1989; 58 FR 4345, Jan. 14,
1993; 63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998; 66 FR 16006, Mar. 22, 2001]
Representation
Sec. 1.455 Representation in international applications.
(a) Applicants of international applications may be represented by
attorneys or agents registered to practice before the Patent and
Trademark Office or by an applicant appointed as a common representative
(PCT Art. 49, Rules 4.8 and 90 and Sec. 10.10). If applicants have not
appointed an attorney or agent or one of the applicants to represent
them, and there is more than one applicant, the applicant first named in
the request and who is entitled to file in the U.S. Receiving Office
shall be considered to be the common representative of all the
applicants. An attorney or agent having the right to practice before a
national office with which an international application is filed and for
which the United States is an International Searching Authority or
International Preliminary Examining Authority may be appointed to
represent the applicants in the international application before that
authority. An attorney or agent may appoint an associate attorney or
agent who shall also then be of record (PCT Rule 90.1(d)). The
appointment of an attorney or agent, or of a common representative,
revokes any earlier appointment unless otherwise indicated (PCT Rule
90.6 (b) and (c)).
(b) Appointment of an agent, attorney or common representative (PCT
Rule 4.8) must be effected either in the Request form, signed by all
applicants, or in a separate power of attorney submitted either to the
United States Receiving Office or to the International Bureau.
(c) Powers of attorney and revocations thereof should be submitted
to the United States Receiving Office until the issuance of the
international search report.
(d) The addressee for correspondence will be as indicated in section
108 of the Administrative Instructions.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 50 FR 5171, Feb. 6, 1985; 58
FR 4345, Jan. 14, 1993]
Transmittal of Record Copy
Sec. 1.461 Procedures for transmittal of record copy to the International Bureau.
(a) Transmittal of the record copy of the international application
to the International Bureau shall be made by the United States Receiving
Office or as provided by PCT Rule 19.4.
(b) [Reserved]
(c) No copy of an international application may be transmitted to
the
[[Page 123]]
International Bureau, a foreign Designated Office, or other foreign
authority by the United States Receiving Office or the applicant, unless
the applicable requirements of part 5 of this chapter have been
satisfied.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 50 FR 9384, Mar. 7, 1985; 63
FR 29619, June 1, 1998]
Timing
Sec. 1.465 Timing of application processing based on the priority date.
(a) For the purpose of computing time limits under the Treaty, the
priority date shall be defined as in PCT Art. 2(xi).
(b) When a claimed priority date is corrected or added under PCT
Rule 26bis.1(a), or withdrawn under PCT Rule 90bis.3, or considered not
to have been made under PCT Rule 26bis.2, the priority date for the
purposes of computing any non-expired time limits will be the date of
the earliest valid remaining priority claim of the international
application, or if none, the international filing date.
(c) When corrections under PCT Art. 11(2), Art. 14(2) or PCT Rule
20.2(a) (i) or (iii) are timely submitted, and the date of receipt of
such corrections falls later than one year from the claimed priority
date or dates, the Receiving Office shall proceed under PCT Rule
26bis.2.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.468 Delays in meeting time limits.
Delays in meeting time limits during international processing of
international applications may only be excused as provided in PCT Rule
82. For delays in meeting time limits in a national application, see
Sec. 1.137.
Amendments
Sec. 1.471 Corrections and amendments during international processing.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, all corrections
submitted to the United States Receiving Office or United States
International Searching Authority must be in English, in the form of
replacement sheets in compliance with PCT Rules 10 and 11, and
accompanied by a letter that draws attention to the differences between
the replaced sheets and the replacement sheets. Replacement sheets are
not required for the deletion of lines of text, the correction of simple
typographical errors, and one addition or change of not more than five
words per sheet. These changes may be stated in a letter and, if
appropriate, the United States Receiving Office will make the deletion
or transfer the correction to the international application, provided
that such corrections do not adversely affect the clarity and direct
reproducibility of the application (PCT Rule 26.4). Amendments that do
not comply with PCT Rules 10 and 11.1 to 11.13 may not be entered.
(b) Amendments of claims submitted to the International Bureau shall
be as prescribed by PCT Rule 46.
(c) Corrections or additions to the Request of any declarations
under PCT Rule 4.17 should be submitted to the International Bureau as
prescribed by PCT Rule 26ter.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978, as amended at 63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998; 66
FR 16006, Mar. 22, 2001]
Sec. 1.472 Changes in person, name, or address of applicants and inventors.
All requests for a change in person, name or address of applicants
and inventor be sent to the United States Receiving Office until the
time of issuance of the international search report. Thereafter requests
for such changes should be submitted to the International Bureau.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978. Redesignated at 52 FR 20047, May 28, 1987]
Unity of Invention
Sec. 1.475 Unity of invention before the International Searching Authority, the International Preliminary Examining Authority and during the national stage.
(a) An international and a national stage application shall relate
to one invention only or to a group of inventions so linked as to form a
single general inventive concept (``requirement of unity of
invention''). Where a group
[[Page 124]]
of inventions is claimed in an application, the requirement of unity of
invention shall be fulfilled only when there is a technical relationship
among those inventions involving one or more of the same or
corresponding special technical features. The expression ``special
technical features'' shall mean those technical features that define a
contribution which each of the claimed inventions, considered as a
whole, makes over the prior art.
(b) An international or a national stage application containing
claims to different categories of invention will be considered to have
unity of invention if the claims are drawn only to one of the following
combinations of categories:
(1) A product and a process specially adapted for the manufacture of
said product; or
(2) A product and a process of use of said product; or
(3) A product, a process specially adapted for the manufacture of
the said product, and a use of the said product; or
(4) A process and an apparatus or means specifically designed for
carrying out the said process; or
(5) A product, a process specially adapted for the manufacture of
the said product, and an apparatus or means specifically designed for
carrying out the said process.
(c) If an application contains claims to more or less than one of
the combinations of categories of invention set forth in paragraph (b)
of this section, unity of invention might not be present.
(d) If multiple products, processes of manufacture or uses are
claimed, the first invention of the category first mentioned in the
claims of the application and the first recited invention of each of the
other categories related thereto will be considered as the main
invention in the claims, see PCT Article 17(3)(a) and Sec. 1.476(c).
(e) The determination whether a group of inventions is so linked as
to form a single general inventive concept shall be made without regard
to whether the inventions are claimed in separate claims or as
alternatives within a single claim.
[58 FR 4345, Jan. 14, 1993]
Sec. 1.476 Determination of unity of invention before the International Searching Authority.
(a) Before establishing the international search report, the
International Searching Authority will determine whether the
international application complies with the requirement of unity of
invention as set forth in Sec. 1.475.
(b) If the International Searching Authority considers that the
international application does not comply with the requirement of unity
of invention, it shall inform the applicant accordingly and invite the
payment of additional fees (note Sec. 1.445 and PCT Art. 17(3)(a) and
PCT Rule 40). The applicant will be given a time period in accordance
with PCT Rule 40.3 to pay the additional fees due.
(c) In the case of non-compliance with unity of invention and where
no additional fees are paid, the international search will be performed
on the invention first mentioned (``main invention'') in the claims.
(d) Lack of unity of invention may be directly evident before
considering the claims in relation to any prior art, or after taking the
prior art into consideration, as where a document discovered during the
search shows the invention claimed in a generic or linking claim lacks
novelty or is clearly obvious, leaving two or more claims joined thereby
without a common inventive concept. In such a case the International
Searching Authority may raise the objection of lack of unity of
invention.
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978. Redesignated and amended at 52 FR 20048, May
28, 1987; 58 FR 4346, Jan. 14, 1993]
Sec. 1.477 Protest to lack of unity of invention before the International Searching Authority.
(a) If the applicant disagrees with the holding of lack of unity of
invention by the International Searching Authority, additional fees may
be paid under protest, accompanied by a request for refund and a
statement setting forth reasons for disagreement or why the required
additional fees are considered excessive, or both (PCT Rule 40.2(c)).
(b) Protest under paragraph (a) of this section will be examined by
the
[[Page 125]]
Commissioner or the Commissioner's designee. In the event that the
applicant's protest is determined to be justified, the additional fees
or a portion thereof will be refunded.
(c) An applicant who desires that a copy of the protest and the
decision thereon accompany the international search report when
forwarded to the Designated Offices, may notify the International
Searching Authority to that effect any time prior to the issuance of the
international search report. Thereafter, such notification should be
directed to the International Bureau (PCT Rule 40.2(c)).
[43 FR 20466, May 11, 1978. Redesignated and amended at 52 FR 20048, May
28, 1987]
International Preliminary Examination
Sec. 1.480 Demand for international preliminary examination.
(a) On the filing of a proper Demand in an application for which the
United States International Preliminary Examining Authority is competent
and for which the fees have been paid, the international application
shall be the subject of an international preliminary examination. The
preliminary examination fee (Sec. 1.482(a)(1)) and the handling fee
(Sec. 1.482(b)) shall be due at the time of filing the Demand.
(b) The Demand shall be made on a standardized form. Copies of
printed Demand forms are available from the Patent and Trademark Office.
Letters requesting printed Demand forms should be marked ``Box PCT''.
(c) Withdrawal of a proper Demand prior to the start of the
international preliminary examination will entitle applicant to a refund
of the preliminary examination fee minus the amount of the transmittal
fee set forth in Sec. 1.445(a)(1).
[52 FR 20048, May 28, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 47810, Nov. 28, 1988; 58
FR 4346, Jan. 14, 1993; 63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998; 67 FR 523, Jan. 4,
2002]
Sec. 1.481 Payment of international preliminary examination fees.
(a) The handling and preliminary examination fees shall be paid
within the time period set in PCT Rule 57.3. The handling fee or
preliminary examination fee payable is the handling fee or preliminary
examination fee in effect on the date of receipt of the Demand except
under PCT Rule 59.3(a) where the fee payable is the fee in effect on the
date of arrival of the Demand at the United States International
Preliminary Examining Authority.
(1) If the handling and preliminary fees are not paid within the
time period set in PCT Rule 57.3, applicant will be notified and given
one month within which to pay the deficient fees plus a late payment fee
equal to the greater of:
(i) Fifty percent of the amount of the deficient fees, but not
exceeding an amount equal to double the handling fee; or
(ii) An amount equal to the handling fee (PCT Rule 58bis.2).
(2) The one-month time limit set in this paragraph to pay deficient
fees may not be extended.
(b) If the payment needed to cover the handling and preliminary
examination fees, pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section, is not
timely made in accordance with PCT Rule 58bis.1(d), the United States
International Preliminary Examination Authority will declare the Demand
to be considered as if it had not been submitted.
[63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.482 International preliminary examination fees.
(a) The following fees and charges for international preliminary
examination are established by the Commissioner under the authority of
35 U.S.C. 376:
(1) A preliminary examination fee is due on filing the Demand:
(i) Where an international search fee as set forth in
Sec. 1.445(a)(2) has been paid on the international application to the
United States Patent and Trademark Office as an International Searching
Authority, a preliminary examination fee of--$490.00
(ii) Where the International Searching Authority for the
international application was an authority other than the United States
Patent and Trademark Office, a preliminary examination fee of--$750.00
(2) An additional preliminary examination fee when required, per
additional invention:
[[Page 126]]
(i) Where the International Searching Authority for the
international application was the United States Patent and Trademark
Office--$140.00
(ii) Where the International Searching Authority for the
international application was an authority other than the United States
Patent and Trademark Office--$270.00
(b) The handling fee is due on filing the Demand.
(35 U.S.C. 6, 376)
[52 FR 20048, May 28, 1987, as amended at 56 FR 65154, Dec. 13, 1991; 57
FR 38196, Aug. 21, 1992; 58 FR 4346, Jan. 14, 1993; 60 FR 41023, Aug.
11, 1995; 61 FR 39588, July 30, 1996; 62 FR 40453, July 29, 1997]
Sec. 1.484 Conduct of international preliminary examination.
(a) An international preliminary examination will be conducted to
formulate a non-binding opinion as to whether the claimed invention has
novelty, involves an inventive step (is non-obvious) and is industrially
applicable.
(b) International preliminary examination will begin promptly upon
receipt of a proper Demand in an application for which the United States
International Preliminary Examining Authority is competent, for which
the fees for international preliminary examination (Sec. 1.482) have
been paid, and which requests examination based on the application as
filed or as amended by an amendment which has been received by the
United States International Preliminary Examining Authority. Where a
Demand requests examination based on a PCT Article 19 amendment which
has not been received, examination may begin at 20 months without
receipt of the PCT Article 19 amendment. Where a Demand requests
examination based on a PCT Article 34 amendment which has not been
received, applicant will be notified and given a time period within
which to submit the amendment.
(1) Examination will begin after the earliest of:
(i) Receipt of the amendment;
(ii) Receipt of applicant's statement that no amendment will be
made; or
(iii) Expiration of the time period set in the notification.
(2) No international preliminary examination report will be
established prior to issuance of an international search report.
(c) No international preliminary examination will be conducted on
inventions not previously searched by an International Searching
Authority.
(d) The International Preliminary Examining Authority will establish
a written opinion if any defect exists or if the claimed invention lacks
novelty, inventive step or industrial applicability and will set a non-
extendable time limit in the written opinion for the applicant to reply.
(e) If no written opinion under paragraph (d) of this section is
necessary, or after any written opinion and the reply thereto or the
expiration of the time limit for reply to such written opinion, an
international preliminary examination report will be established by the
International Preliminary Examining Authority. One copy will be
submitted to the International Bureau and one copy will be submitted to
the applicant.
(f) An applicant will be permitted a personal or telephone interview
with the examiner, which must be conducted during the non-extendable
time limit for reply by the applicant to a written opinion. Additional
interviews may be conducted where the examiner determines that such
additional interviews may be helpful to advancing the international
preliminary examination procedure. A summary of any such personal or
telephone interview must be filed by the applicant as a part of the
reply to the written opinion or, if applicant files no reply, be made of
record in the file by the examiner.
(g) If the application whose priority is claimed in the
international application is in a language other than English, the
United States International Preliminary Examining Authority may, where
the validity of the priority claim is relevant for the formulation of
the opinion referred to in Article 33(1), invite the applicant to
furnish an English translation of the priority document within two
months from the date of the invitation. If the translation is not
furnished within that time limit, the international preliminary
examination report may be
[[Page 127]]
established as if the priority had not been claimed.
[52 FR 20049, May 28, 1987, as amended at 58 FR 4346, Jan. 14, 1993; 62
FR 53199, Oct. 10, 1997; 63 FR 29619, June 1, 1998; 66 FR 16006, Mar.
22, 2001]
Sec. 1.485 Amendments by applicant during international preliminary examination.
(a) The applicant may make amendments at the time of filing the
Demand. The applicant may also make amendments within the time limit set
by the International Preliminary Examining Authority for reply to any
notification under Sec. 1.484(b) or to any written opinion. Any such
amendments must:
(1) Be made by submitting a replacement sheet in compliance with PCT
Rules 10 and 11.1 to 11.13 for every sheet of the application which
differs from the sheet it replaces unless an entire sheet is cancelled;
and
(2) Include a description of how the replacement sheet differs from
the replaced sheet. Amendments that do not comply with PCT Rules 10 and
11.1 to 11.13 may not be entered.
(b) If an amendment cancels an entire sheet of the international
application, that amendment shall be communicated in a letter.
[58 FR 4346, Jan. 14, 1993, as amended at 63 FR 29620, June 1, 1998]
Sec. 1.488 Determination of unity of invention before the International Preliminary Examining Authority.
(a) Before establishing any written opinion or the international
preliminary examination report, the International Preliminary Examining
Authority will determine whether the international application complies
with the requirement of unity of invention as set forth in Sec. 1.475.
(b) If the International Preliminary Examining Authority considers
that the international application does not comply with the requirement
of unity of invention, it may:
(1) Issue a written opinion and/or an international preliminary
examination report, in respect of the entire international application
and indicate that unity of invention is lacking and specify the reasons
therefor without extending an invitation to restrict or pay additional
fees. No international preliminary examination will be conducted on
inventions not previously searched by an International Searching
Authority.
(2) Invite the applicant to restrict the claims or pay additional
fees, pointing out the categories of invention found, within a set time
limit which will not be extended. No international preliminary
examination will be conducted on inventions not previously searched by
an International Searching Authority, or
(3) If applicant fails to restrict the claims or pay additional fees
within the time limit set for reply, the International Preliminary
Examining Authority will issue a written opinion and/or establish an
international preliminary examination report on the main invention and
shall indicate the relevant facts in the said report. In case of any
doubt as to which invention is the main invention, the invention first
mentioned in the claims and previously searched by an International
Searching Authority shall be considered the main invention.
(c) Lack of unity of invention may be directly evident before
considering the claims in relation to any prior art, or after taking the
prior art into consideration, as where a document discovered during the
search shows the invention claimed in a generic or linking claim lacks
novelty or is clearly obvious, leaving two or more claims joined thereby
without a common inventive concept. In such a case the International
Preliminary Examining Authority may raise the objection of lack of unity
of invention.
[52 FR 20049, May 28, 1987, as amended at 58 FR 4346, Jan. 14, 1993; 62
FR 53200, Oct. 10, 1997]
Sec. 1.489 Protest to lack of unity of invention before the International Preliminary Examining Authority.
(a) If the applicant disagrees with the holding of lack of unity of
invention by the International Preliminary Examining Authority,
additional fees may be paid under protest, accompanied by a request for
refund and a statement setting forth reasons for disagreement or why the
required additional fees are considered excessive, or both.
[[Page 128]]
(b) Protest under paragraph (a) of this section will be examined by
the Commissioner or the Commissioner's designee. In the event that the
applicant's protest is determined to be justified, the additional fees
or a portion thereof will be refunded.
(c) An applicant who desires that a copy of the protest and the
decision thereon accompany the international preliminary examination
report when forwarded to the Elected Offices, may notify the
International Preliminary Examining Authority to that effect any time
prior to the issuance of the international preliminary examination
report. Thereafter, such notification should be directed to the
International Bureau.
[52 FR 20050, May 28, 1987]
National Stage
Sec. 1.491 National stage commencement and entry.
(a) Subject to 35 U.S.C. 371(f), the national stage shall commence
with the expiration of the applicable time limit under PCT Article 22
(1) or (2), or under PCT Article 39(1)(a).
(b) An international application enters the national stage when the
applicant has filed the documents and fees required by 35 U.S.C. 371(c)
within the period set in Sec. 1.495.
[67 FR 523, Jan. 4, 2002]