January 2010

Narrowing Claims in Reissue

In a prior post, I discussed the BPAI’s recent precedential decision of Ex parte Tanaka (BPAI 2009). In that case, Board held that a patentee’s failure to add an additional dependent claim (without cancelling the broader claims) was not the type of “error” that is correctable via reissue.  Tanaka had wanted to add the aditional claim as a hedge against the potential that the broader claims were found invalid.

Oblon’s Chico Gholz e-mailed me with a likely caveat to this decision based on his 2008 IP Today article. In that article he suggests that is should be proper in a reissue to merely add an additional narrower claim if the purpose is to provoke an interference. [Link

Patently-O Bits and Bytes

  • BTLJ Student Writing Competition. The Berkeley Technology Law Journal is hosting its own writing competition for law student (JD) papers focused on some topic near the intersection of law & technology. $2,000 prize and likely publication in the journal.  Deadline is February 26, 2010. [Rules].
  • Recent Jobs Posted to Patently-O Jobs:
  • Patent Damages Handbook: A committee of patent professionals and judges formed at the behest of Chief Judge Michel recently released their “Patent Damages Handbook.” The 34 page handbook is intended as a “resource for judges and lawyers” in understanding the damages phase of patent litigation “under current law.”  Download it for free.
  • Patently-O Bits and Bytes

    • BTLJ Student Writing Competition. The Berkeley Technology Law Journal is hosting its own writing competition for law student (JD) papers focused on some topic near the intersection of law & technology. $2,000 prize and likely publication in the journal.  Deadline is February 26, 2010. [Rules].
    • Recent Jobs Posted to Patently-O Jobs:
  • Patent Damages Handbook: A committee of patent professionals and judges formed at the behest of Chief Judge Michel recently released their “Patent Damages Handbook.” The 34 page handbook is intended as a “resource for judges and lawyers” in understanding the damages phase of patent litigation “under current law.”  Download it for free.
  • Reissue Cannot Merely Add New Dependent Claims (Without Cancelling the Broader Claims)

    Ex parte Tanaka (BPAI 2009) (Precedential)

    The number of patents undergoing reissue is at an all-time high. [LINK] Often, patentees prefer the reissue route over reexamination. In a reissue, for instance, an applicant may file RCEs and divisional applications. Those common elements of patent prosecution are prohibited during reexaminations. Likewise, claims can be broadened in a reissue, but not during reexamination. Finally, the time-pressure of reissue prosecution on the patentee is small comparable to that of reexamination.

    Under 35 U.S.C. § 251, the reissue process is to correct an “error” in a patent that would tend to make the patent “wholly or partly inoperative or invalid.” The statute lists specific types of errors, including “a defective specification or drawing, or by reason of the patentee claiming more or less than he had a right to claim in the patent.”

    In this case, the patent applicant (Seiko) started a reissue process claiming that its mistake was in failing to include an additional narrower dependent claim to “hedge against possible invalidity of the original claims.” The patentee did not cancel the broader claims because they were still potentially valid.

    Issuing a precedential decision, the BPAI has interpreted Section 251 to bar reissue in this case.

    [T]he Examiner found that because the reissue application contains all of the original patent claims and adds by reissue application only a single dependent claim 16, the reissue declaration cannot satisfy the error required under 35 U.S.C. § 251 because it cannot properly allege that the patent is wholly or partly inoperative or invalid by reason of the patentee claiming more or less than he had a right to claim in the patent.

    We affirm.

    This interpretation of Section 251 falls in-line with MPEP § 1402 and with the dicta of Hewlett-Packard Co. v. Bausch & Lomb, Inc., 882 F.2d 1556, 1565 (Fed. Cir. 1989).

    Notes: Interestingly, Tanaka originally filed the reissue application and submitted a preliminary amendment that would broaden independent claim 1. (App No 10/201,948). After receiving a final rejection for the broadened claim, Tanaka changed its tactics; reinstated the original claim 1 and added a narrowed claim 16 that includes limitations not found in any other claim. At that time, Tanaka also submitted a substitute reissue declaration

    Southern California Wins Trademark Battle with South Carolina

    SC v. SC (Fed. Cir. 2009)

    The University of South Carolina (Carolina) was founded in 1801 and is the flagship public university of the state. The University of Southern California (Southern Cal) was founded in 1880 and is a large private university located in Los Angeles. This case involves a trademark dispute between the two universities.

    The case arose when Carolina attempted to register its SC-logo and Southern Cal opposed the trademark registration based on its own interlocking SC-logo. [See hats below] Carolina retaliated by moving to cancel Southern Cal's trademark registration of the initials "SC" based on the mark's suggestion of a false association between Southern Cal and the State of South Carolina.

    The Trademark Appeal Board (TTAB) sided with Southern Cal in (1) refusing to register Carolina's SC-logo because it was confusingly similar to Southern Cal's logo; (2) holding that Carolina lacked standing to bring the cancellation counterclaim; and (3) finding that the initials "SC" are not unmistakably associated with the State of South Carolina. On appeal, the Federal Circuit affirmed.

    Confusingly Similar: The appellate panel first agreed that the TTAB had appropriately held that the SC-logos were confusingly similar despite the lack of any actual evidence of customer confusion. (South Carolina did not appeal the Board’s findings that the marks were legally identical.)

    Regarding Southern Cal's registration of the initials "SC," the appellate panel rejected the TTAB's finding that Carolina lacked standing, but affirmed the summary judgment because Carolina had not shown a genuine issue of material fact for trial.

    Standing in a Cancellation Proceeding: A party damaged by a registered mark's "suggestion of a false association" has a right to file for cancellation of that mark. To have standing, the party must also show a "real interest" in the proceeding and a "reasonable basis" for the belief that the mark has (or will) cause false-association damage. The Federal Circuit found that Carolina had met this test of standing because it sold goods bearing the same mark.

    Standard for Cancellation based on False Association: "To prevail on a Section 2(a) Lanham Act claim for cancellation based on false association, a party must show that the challenged mark is 'unmistakably associated' with another person or institution." Here, Carolina provided evidence that the public does associate the initials "SC" with South Carolina. However, that evidence is insufficient for a false association claim because "SC" also refers to "many entities aside from the state."

    Indeed, South Carolina, in the context of another issue, submitted evidence showing that at least sixteen other universities and colleges represent themselves as "SC." In light of this evidence, South Carolina did not satisfy its burden on summary judgment. Even drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of South Carolina, evidence showing that the initials "SC" could refer to the State of South Carolina does not create a genuine issue on whether the initials uniquely point to the State.

    Affirmed

    As a native of South Carolina, I am regularly confused by uses of “SC” that refer to non-South-Carolina entities.

    Patently-O Bits and Bytes No. 312

    • Bruce Pokras recently made available his "Family-izer 2.4.1" web version. The free web-based software uses the EPO's INPADOC patent family database to group a list of patents into "families." This becomes quite helpful when looking at a portfolio of patents. Although the program runs on a web-browser, you will still need to download a small program to make it work. It took me about 3 minutes to get going.
    • The USPTO FY2009 Annual Report provides the following numbers as of September 30, 2009:
      • Total Number of Pending Non-Provisional Utility Patent Applications: 1,139,344.
      • Percent that have Not Received a First Action from an Examiner: 53.4%

    GRAPH UPDATED

    PatentLawPic873

    Design Patent Rejections

    Most utility patent applications are rejected at least once on either anticipation or obviousness.  Design patents are different.

    As part of a larger project, I combed through 1049 file histories of design patents that issued in the past 12 months. Of those, 5 were rejected on novelty grounds and 8 on obviousness. This leads to a prior-art-based rejection rate of 1.2% (95% CI range of 0.7% – 2.1%).  The vast majority of the patents (81.6%) were never rejected during prosecution.  The most common rejections are under 35 USC 112 paragraphs 1 and 2.  Typically both paragraphs are asserted simultaneously.

    According to the most recent USPTO annual report, design patents had an allowance rate of about 90% during the period FY2005–FY2009 as measured by the percentage of disposals that were allowances.  About half of design patents issued in 2009 were pending for less than one year.

    PatentlyO032

    These numbers suggest that the US design patent system is operating as a registration system rather than as one based on a true examination.  Along this vein, it is typically easier and cheaper to prosecute a design patent to issuance than to register a product design as trade dress.  To be clear, I support the idea of a design patent registration system. More on that in another post.

    Patently-O Bits and Bytes No. 311

    PatentlyO033Quoted: President Obama to the Forum on Moderninzing Government:

    “Believe it or not, in our patent office — now, this is embarrassing — this is an institution responsible for protecting and promoting innovation — our patent office receives more than 80 percent of patent applications electronically, then manually prints them out, scans them, and enters them into an outdated case management system. This is one of the reasons why the average processing time for a patent is roughly three years.”

    The Milwaukee Journal Sentinal asks “is it time to privatize the Patent Office?”  If not the whole PTO, the editorial asks why not “privatize most of the Patent Office functions?”

    GWU’s IP Speaker Series Continues at 12:00 Noon this Spring:

    • January 20, Laura Heymann of William & Mary (Naming, Identity, and Trademark Law)
    • February 3, Michael Ryan of GWU, (Patent Incentives in Brazil)
    • February 10, Abraham Drassinower of Toronto Law (What’s Wrong with Copying)
    • February 24, Jonathan Zittrain of Harvard Law (Minds for Sale)
    • March 24, Mark Janis of Indiana Law (Daniel Webster’s Patent Cases)

    Writing Competition: Virginia State Bar Section on Intellectual Property Law Law Student Writing Competition.  $4,000 cash will be given to a current US Law Student (including December 2009 graduates) who either attends school in Virginia or is a resident of Virginia. The prize will be awarded to author of the best IP focused law-review-style article. [Link]


     

    Patently-O Bits and Bytes No. 311

    PatentlyO033Quoted: President Obama to the Forum on Moderninzing Government:

    “Believe it or not, in our patent office — now, this is embarrassing — this is an institution responsible for protecting and promoting innovation — our patent office receives more than 80 percent of patent applications electronically, then manually prints them out, scans them, and enters them into an outdated case management system. This is one of the reasons why the average processing time for a patent is roughly three years.”

    The Milwaukee Journal Sentinal asks “is it time to privatize the Patent Office?”  If not the whole PTO, the editorial asks why not “privatize most of the Patent Office functions?”

    GWU’s IP Speaker Series Continues at 12:00 Noon this Spring:

    • January 20, Laura Heymann of William & Mary (Naming, Identity, and Trademark Law)
    • February 3, Michael Ryan of GWU, (Patent Incentives in Brazil)
    • February 10, Abraham Drassinower of Toronto Law (What’s Wrong with Copying)
    • February 24, Jonathan Zittrain of Harvard Law (Minds for Sale)
    • March 24, Mark Janis of Indiana Law (Daniel Webster’s Patent Cases)

    Writing Competition: Virginia State Bar Section on Intellectual Property Law Law Student Writing Competition.  $4,000 cash will be given to a current US Law Student (including December 2009 graduates) who either attends school in Virginia or is a resident of Virginia. The prize will be awarded to author of the best IP focused law-review-style article. [Link]


     

    Law School Summer Programs in Intellectual Property for 2010

    When law students ask, I generally recommend pursuing practical experience rather than summer school. This year, however, summer jobs for law students are scarce — making school a more likely alternative. Summer programs that focus on intellectual property (IP) law are especially interesting because they draw-together a critical mass of students and professors who are interested in patent and copyright issues.  In those settings, the intellectual property law discussions tend to spill-out from the class into lunch, dinner, and late-night pub conversations or debates.  In my experience, summer classes are often less rigorous than the ordinary law school classes. For that reason, I might avoid taking core-classes such as US Patent Law.

    I created a simple spreadsheet guide [Download IPSummer2010] to help students locate intellectual property focused summer programs. To create the guide, I contacted all of the US patent law professors that I know and also sent an e-mail to the Deans of Academic Affairs of US Law School. There may be other programs out there — notably, many law schools offer summer classes in IP law (although I wouldn't call those IP Programs).

    Study Abroad: The list includes two programs in Munich, Germany (George Washington and Santa Clara); two programs in China (Franklin Pierce and John Marshall); and two programs on the isles (Loyola of LA in London and Franklin Pierce in Cork). Although not strictly an intellectual property program, UW/Marquette program in Giessen Germany will include an IP component.

    In the US, Franklin Pierce's Intellectual Property Summer Institute (IPSI) has been a mainstay in Concord, NH. This year, they expect to offer 15 different courses focused on intellectual property (students are only allowed to earn up to 6 credits). I taught in Concord in the summer of '07 and had a fabulous time. Although the information is not yet fully available, American University is also planning a summer program in Washington DC as part of its Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property (PIJIP). On the west coast, Santa Clara is again offering several IP classes through its Hi-Tech Summer School in Santa Clara (Silicon Valley). Folks at SUNY Buffalo (Buffalo, NY) and TM Cooley (Auburn Hills, MI) also wrote in to note that they will be offering IP classes within their summer offerings. I suspect that other schools will do the same.

    All of the IP summer programs have limited enrollment.

    Files: Download IPSummer2010.

    Book Review: Patent Ethics: Volume I Prosecution

    [This post is an old-one, I’ve moved it to the front because Amazon now has the books in stock.]

    Patent Ethics: ProsecutionHricikEthics.jpg

    by David Hricik & Mercedes Meyer

    ISBN: 0195338359

    $225 from Amazon

    Professor David Hricik is the country’s leading expert on patent law ethics. Oxford University Press recently published his (and co-author Mercedes Meyer’s) volume on patent prosecution ethics. This is a book that includes specific guidance for both patent attorneys and patent agents. It should be within the reach of every patent prosecutor. Topics include: guidance on client engagement and dis-engagement; the duty of loyalty to the client (perhaps as opposed to the inventor); avoiding conflicts of interest; specific areas of competency in patent prosecution; avoiding pitfalls created by the duty of candor; and issues arising from attorneys who practice both prosecution with litigation. The book also includes two very helpful appendices. The first appendix is an annotated version of the PTO ethics rules where the authors discuss nuances of each rule. The second is a set of sample forms; checklists; and client-memos — a version of which should be used by every patent practitioner in handling client relations.

    I suspect that this book will quickly become the leading authority on patent prosecution ethics. Although not at all foolproof, attorneys and agents who rely on the book for guidance will have some cover from charges of malpractice or inequitable conduct.

    My only problem with the book is its price: $255! Once you add tax and shipping, the cost approaches $1 per page. Of course, that price would get you only about a 1/2 hour of Professor Hricik’s time. This book is the first volume in a two-part series. The second volume will be published in 2010 and will focus on patent litigation ethics.

    Patently-O Bits and Bytes No. 310: On TV

    • PatentLawPic870New on NBC: “Kindreds,” created by Emmy Award winner David E. Kelley (“Boston Legal,” “The Practice,” “L.A. Law”), follows a curmudgeonly ex-patent lawyer and his group of misfit associates as their lives come together to form an unconventional kind of law practice. The series is from Warner Bros. Television and David E. Kelley Productions. Kelley is the writer and executive producer.
    • New on Fox: Although it has nothing to do with patent law, Sons of Tucson was written by my college roommate.
    • Last night on PBS: Copyright Criminals. I have the DVD version and will write a review once I watch it. [LINK]
    • The Shark Tank: For those who have not seen it, the Shark Tank is pretty funny. The investors clearly see the importance of intellectually property rights but the nuances are almost always lost (perhaps in the editing process). [Link]
    • Patent Juries: Joe Mullin has a great article at IPL&B on the jury verdict in the i4i v. Microsoft case. [Link]
    • Dr. Noonan on Gene Patents and the L.A.Times: [I]n an editorial entitled “Genes and patents,” the L.A. Times joined its East Coast cousin in taking an inaccurate and irrational position on an important question: patents on diagnostic methods involving genetic information. [Link]

    PTA Errors: How Hard to Fight

    Many recently issued patents should receive a further extension of their patent terms based on the USPTO’s miscalculations of PTA and the Federal Circuit’s decision in Wyeth v. Kappos. To receive that those additional months of protection, however, the patent holder may have to file a civil action against the PTO. The question for patentees will be whether the expected value of those additional months at the end of the patent term (years from now) are worth the up-front expense of filing suit.

    I am confident that most applicants will find it not worthwhile to go about the effort of seeking the additional PTA extension. As I wrote in 2009, most patents expire before the end of their alloted patent term because applicants fail to pay the maintenance fees. [Link] That said, more than 45% of patents are maintained in-force through the patent term.

    In the next few days, we may see a few firms ramping-up as PTA specialists in a way that could reduce the cost of suing.

    Links:

    As a side-note, Irving Kayton’s company offers PTA Calculation for $200 per patent. (PatentTerm.Com).

    Patent Term Adjustment Statistics

    The Patent Term Adjustment (PTA) procedure operates to lengthen the patent term of a utility patent based on delays during patent prosecution. The current backlog of applications at the PTO suggests that most newly issued patents will have some positive adjustment.

    I looked at the patent term adjustment (PTA) calculations for the 3187 utility patent issued on January 12, 2010. Eighty percent (80%) of these newly issued patents included some adjustment of the patent term based on the length of prosecution. For those with some adjustment, the average PTA is 14.5 months. The longest PTA adjustment in this group was for 74.5 months (six+ years). That patent (No. 7,647,402) took almost nine-years to issue. Under the Wyeth v. Kappos decision, I calculate that the PTA for the ‘402 patent would be extended by almost two additional years to 98 months (8+ years).

    The chart below shows the cumulative frequency of PTA calculations for the January 12, 2010 patents using the pre-Wyeth calculations. It will be interesting to see if the PTO recalculates the PTA for these newly issued patents based on the Wyeth decision.

    PTACalc.jpg

    Appeals versus RCEs: The Wyeth PTA boost puts an additional thumb on the scale of appealing final rejections because filing of an RCE prevents any further accumulation of Part-B PTA. 35 U.S.C. 154(b)(1)(B)(i).

    Reconsidering Divided Infringement

    Centillion Data Systems, LLC v. Quest Corp., Appeal No. 2010-1110 (Fed. Cir. 2010)(now on appeal).

    Centillon’s patent No. 5,287,270 covers a system used to present user-specified pre-processed summary reports of billing information. In 2004, Centillon sued Qwest for infringement – arguing that the communications company offered this type of functionality to its customers. (LOGIC, eBill Companion, and Insite). The major problem with Centillon’s claims is that they require activity on both a system computer and a customer’s personal computer. This is a situation often termed divided-infringement.

    Section 271 of the Patent Act creates a cause of action for unauthorized “use” of a patented invention. Centillon argued that Qwest used its invention by offering the service to its customers. However, in a 2009 ruling, the district court held that Qwest could not be liable because the company did not use each and every element of the asserted claims. Rather, some of the elements of the system were used only by Qwest customers.

    In NTP v. RIM, 418 F.3d 1282 (Fed. Cir. 2005), the Federal Circuit broadly defined “use” of a patented system to focus on control and beneficial use of the system as a whole. Although that case defined use within the context of determining whether a system was used “within the United States” the district court found that a similar definition applies when determining whether a single entity used the invention. However, instead of looking at use of the system as a whole, the district court felt bound to consider “use” on an element-by-element basis. Thus:

    [A] party is liable for direct infringement for the “use” of a system claim under § 271(a) if it, by itself or in combination with a third party directed by it, put each and every element of the system claim into service, i.e. exercised control over, and benefited from, the application of each and every element of the system claim.

    A real trick in divided-infringement situations is that an accused infringer’s actions of intentionally inducing another party to use some of the elements will not create a cause of action for infringement unless the accused infringer is shown to have control over the use of each element.

    Centillion submits that the accused systems satisfy the ‘270 patent’s limitation “said personal computer data processing means being adapted to perform additional processing” because the e-Bill client application, for example, is designed to adapt the customers’ personal computers, the customers download the application following Qwest’s instructions and user guide, and the customers “further manipulate” the billing data they receive from Qwest. However, as the Court noted earlier, as a general rule, to hold Qwest liable for direct infringement Centillion must demonstrate that Qwest, by itself, practiced each and every limitation of the system claim. Here, however, Qwest relies on its customers to satisfy this limitation. Although the eBill client application may have been designed to adapt the customer’s personal computer, the designated evidence demonstrates that it does not actually adapt the customers computer until the customer executes the application. Moreover, Qwest does not control whether its customers load the Logic or eBill Companion client applications on their personal computers. . . . Centillion admits Qwest’s customers are not obligated or contractually bound to perform additional processing on individual transaction records provided by Qwest. Rather, Qwest’s customers independently determine whether or not to perform additional processing on individual transaction records by Qwest. Moreover, Qwest does not control whether its customers load the Logic or eBill Companion client applications on their personal computers. Therefore, the Court concludes that Centillion has failed to raise genuine issues of material fact regarding whether Qwest directly infringed independent claims 1 and 8, and dependent claims 10 and 46.

    From a practical standpoint, the baseline solution to this problem is to properly draft patent claims to ensure that the claims focus on the operations of a single entity. Here, however, the crux of the invention was way that data from the server was communicated to the PC. The most natural way to describe the invention is to include both of those elements in the claim.

    The appeal is now pending although no briefs have been filed yet. On appeal, the Federal Circuit should hold that the district court too narrowly focused its agency doctrine analysis. The courts have never held that strict control over a third-party’s actions is necessary. This case is similar to ones where the actions of doctors & patients have been conflated and the court then determined whether the combined actions constituted infringement. See, for example, Eli Lilly and Co. v. Actavis Elizabeth LLC, — F.Supp.2d —-, 2009 WL 5159650 (D.N.J. 2009)(“The actions of the doctors and patients will be treated together, and will be considered a directly infringing act.”); AstraZeneca LP v. Apotex, Inc., 623 F.Supp.2d 579, 598-600 (D.N.J.2009); Alza Corp. v. Andrx Pharms., LLC, 607 F.Supp.2d 614, 623 (D.Del.2009)

    Notes:

    Trade Dress Registration Rejected Out of Habit

    PatentLawPic868The Foundation for a Christian Civilization, Inc. v. Mary Queen of the Third Millennium, Inc. (Fed. Cir. 2010)

    If nothing else, the caption of this case is interesting. In 2009, the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB) agreed with Mary Queen of the Third Millennium that the Foundation for a Christian Civilization’s “habit” could not be registered as a trademark because (1) the habit was not inherently distinctive and (2) the habit had not acquired distinctiveness. On appeal the Federal Circuit affirmed without opinion.

    According to my source (Wikipedia), the Foundation is an alternate name for the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property — “an organization of Roman Catholic Inspiration” that “opposes liberal and egalitarian ideas, policies, and trends.” The Foundation traditionally funded a Catholic counterrevolution against communism. Mary Queen of the Third Millennium is part of the a Vatical recognized “private association of Christ’s faithful.”

    Members of both organizations wear the habit with its identifying markings. 

    TTABVUE

     

    Helping Independent Inventors Find a Patent Attorney or Patent Agent

    I occasionally receive requests from independent inventors and very small companies (or their non-patent attorney representatives) looking for patent prosecution representation from someone qualified, inexpensive, and open to a fixed-budget who will honest, quality work.  Is there a reputable service that helps match prosepective patent attorneys/agents with prosepctive clients? Here are some initial thoughts:

    NAPP: The best national resource that I know of for individuals and very small companies is the National Association of Patent Practitioners (NAPP).  In my experience, most NAPP members are associated with small law firms and tend to do a better job of working with individuals.  The NAPP website has a directory of members that is divided according to location and areas of technology.  Of course, the NAPP site does not include any “ratings.” Many local IP Bar Associations also include a referral service. Again, those do not include any attorney ratings.

    PatentLawPic867Getting a Personal Recommendation: An inventor may not know anyone in the industry or even any other local inventors.  One easy way to find this type of information is through patent records that are all available online at the USPTO. Using the USPTO search, an inventor can locate other local inventors and then contact them to ask for a recommendation for a patent attorney or patent agent.  This is an easy way to network and find a referral. Of course, anyone trying this should be cautious about pre-filing disclosure of the invention.

    Self-Help: Read Patent-It-Yourself, but still hire a patent law professional.  The best patents that I have seen are drafted with substantial participation from both inventors and patent law professionals. I have seen high quality patents that were entirely drafted and prosecuted by the non-attorney, non-agent inventor.  However, in those instances, the inventor had been through the patenting process dozens of times already—learning lessons through experience.  Hospitals are full of well trained and well-meaning professionals. However, any hospitalized patient still needs an advocate in order to make sure the patient is receiving the best care that is most in-line with the needs of the patient.  Patent prosecution is the same way, do not expect that you can simply drop-off the invention with the professional and expect that you will receive the type of patent that fills your needs.

    Caveat: Since many non-attorneys are likely to read this, I’ll restate the obvious: this is not legal advice.

    Other thoughts?

    Design Patent Application Pendency

    The USPTO continues to process design patent applications without delay. The first chart below shows the average pendency of design patent applications grouped by their month of issuance.  (Because design patent applications are not published, I can only work with issued patents.)

    PatentlyO031

    The secons chart provides some range for the pendency.  For the most recently issued design patents, about 50% issued within 12–months of the application filing date. Throughout the 1990’s, less than 25% of the design patents issued within 24–months.

    PatentlyO030

    See also: Sailing Through the PTO.

    Design Patents: Symmetry Requires Elimination of Points-of-Novelty Test for Anticipation

    International Seaway Trading Corp v. Walgreens Corp (Fed. Cir. 2009)

    The laws of anticipation and infringement are often considered as a symmetric pair. In its classic statement on point, the Supreme Court proclaimed “[t]hat which infringes, if later, would anticipate, if earlier.” Peters v. Active Mfg. Co., 129 U.S. 530, 537 (1889)

    Design Patent Infringement: In the 2008 en banc Egyptian Goddess decision, the Federal Circuit eliminated the ‘points-of-novelty’ test from the infringement analysis. Infringement of a design patent is now proven by showing that an “an ordinary observer, giving such attention as a purchaser usually gives” would find the accused design “substantially the same” as the patented design. Egyptian Goddess, 543 F.3d 665, 670 (Fed. Cir. 2008)(en banc). Egyptian Goddess has been seen as boon for design patent because infringement is now easier to prove.

    Design Patent Anticipation: If the Egyptian Goddess decision made it easier to prove infringement of a design patent, the rubric of symmetry indicates that the law of anticipation should also change to make it easier to invalidate a design patent. In particular, in this case Walgreens successfully argued that the points-of-novelty test for novelty should be eliminated.

    Prior to the present decision, a design patent would be considered invalid as anticipated if it failed both the points-of-novelty and the ordinary observer tests of novelty. Under the points-of-novelty test, the declared “points-of-novelty” of a patented design are compared with the closest prior art reference to determine whether those same design elements are found in the prior art. Under the ordinary observer test the patented design was compared with the alleged anticipatory reference to determine whether an ordinary observer would find the two “substantially the same.”

    Based on the en banc elimination of the points-of-novelty test for infringement analyses, the Federal Circuit here also eliminated the points-of-novelty test from the anticipation analysis.

    Writing in Dissent, Judge Clevenger agreed with the elimination of the points-of-novelty test, but disagreed with details of the majority opinion. Namely, Judge Clevenger warned against conducting the ordinary observer test by “dissection of a design as a whole into its component pieces.”

    As recognized by the majority, the ordinary observer test requires assessment of the designs as a whole. . . . I agree that the differences in the inner sole designs are to be assessed as part of the anticipation inquiry. But the differences in the inner sole designs must be appreciated in conjunction with all of the design differences. This is so especially with regard to the differing number and arrangement of the circular openings on the upper of the clogs. . . . The effect of the summation of all the design differences is what counts, not the comparison of differences one by one, isolated from each other. Such an approach invites the problems we sought to eliminate by rejecting the “point of novelty” test. . . . Partial judgments of anticipation on segments of a design prohibit assessment of designs as a whole, in violation of long-standing law, starting with Gorham.

    PatentlyO027

    Where is the Next Federal Circuit Judge?

    [Updated at 2:34pm on 1/8/10] Federal Circuit Judge Alvin Schall moved to senior status in early October 2009. Judge Schall gave notice of his intent to take senior status in August 2009, and insiders knew much earlier. This delay leads me to question: Where is the next nominee? Chief Judge Michell has announced his intention to retire in the coming months and at least one additional slot will probably open in 2010. At some-point soon this backlog may begin to resemble the PTO.

    Options:

    Professors: Several leading IP law professors played important roles in the Obama campaign and transition. These include Mark Lemley (Stanford); Arti Rai (Duke); Beth Noveck (now at the White House); and Chris Sprigman (UVA). Other potential professorial candidates include Margo Bagley (UVA); Jay Thomas (Georgetown); Clarisa Long (Columbia); Peter Menell (Berkeley); Pamela Samuelson (Berkeley), etc. Although practitioners would likely find some problem any law professor candidate, a more-left choice would be Josh Sarnoff (American).

    Other potential nominees include Sharon Barner (PTO Deputy Director) and Susan Davies (associate White House counsel). Barner is particularly interesting as a long-time patent litigator and now PTO-insider.

    District Court Judges: One difficulty in appointing a district court judge is that Federal Circuit judges are legally required to live close to DC. In addition, district court judges who were appointed by Clinton are for the most part now aged 60+. Finally, many district court judges are not interested in the limited subject matter of the Federal Circuit. Some potentials include Judges Kathleen O’Malley (N.D.Ohio); Patti Saris (D.Mass); John Ward (E.D.Tx.); and Leonard Davis (E.D.Tx – Bush Appointee). 

    District Court Judges Redux: A recent article in the Recorder notes that many California Patent Attorneys (i.e., the indefatigable Ed Reines & Co.) are pushing for N.D. Cal. Judge Jeremy Fogel to be Nominated. Judge Fogel is clearly an expert on the patent laws and patent litigation. He did not deny (or confirm) his interest in the spot. The article also mentions Judge Sleet (D.Del.), Judge O’Malley (N.D. Ohio), Judge Saris (D.Mass), Professor Lemley, and Chip Lutton (Apple).

    Other Redux: The largest pool of candidates comes from practice. More than half of the current Federal Circuit judges worked as intellectual property attorneys at law firms or in-house—including Judges Newman, Lourie, Gajarsa, Linn, Dyk, and Moore.

     To be clear, this list is not intended to be a short list by any means. The patent law community is ripe with attorneys who are smart, clear thinking, and experienced. My point is that the administration should move forward soon with a nomination.