Patent Resources Group. Chemical Patent Practice. Course Syllabus

Similar documents
Chemical Patent Practice. Course Syllabus

Patent Resources Group Federal Circuit Law Course Syllabus

Designing Around Valid U.S. Patents Course Syllabus

The patentability criteria for inventive step I nonobviousness. The Groups are invited to answer the following questions under their national laws:

United States Patent and Trademark Office. Patent Trial and Appeal Board

Considerations for the United States

OLIVE & OLIVE, P.A. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

Detailed Table of Contents

America Invents Act (AIA) Post-Grant Proceedings. Jeffrey S. Bergman Kevin Kuelbs Laura Witbeck

AIA Post-Grant Proceedings: Lessons Learned from PTAB and Federal Circuit Decisions

COMPARATIVE STUDY REPORT INVENTIVE STEP (JPO - KIPO - SIPO)

America Invents Act: Patent Reform

America Invents Act H.R (Became Law: September 16, 2011) Michael K. Mutter Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch October 11-12, 2011

The use of prosecution history in post-grant patent proceedings

AIA Post-Grant Implementation Begins - Is Your Business Strategy Aligned? August 27, A Web conference hosted by Foley & Lardner LLP

America Invents Act: The Practical Effects of the New USPTO Post-Grant Proceedings

America Invents Act (AIA) Post-Grant Proceedings

Newly Signed U.S. Patent Law Will Overhaul Patent Procurement, Enforcement and Defense

America Invents Act: Patent Reform

New Post Grant Proceedings: Basics by

Crafting & Drafting Winning Patents. Course Syllabus

How To Fix The Amendment Fallacy

Patent Exam Fall 2015

Patent Prosecution. A. For a determination of obviousness of the subject matter under 35 U.S.C

Duh! Finding the Obvious in a Patent Application

USPTO Post Grant Trial Practice

PATENT DISCLOSURE: Meeting Expectations in the USPTO

Post-Grant for Practitioners

USPTO Post Grant Proceedings

The Same Invention or Not the Same Invention? Thorsten Bausch

2013 International Series Korea U.S. IP Judicial Conference. Patentability of Chemical/Pharmaceutical Inventions. Isomers/Enantiomers

COMPARATIVE STUDY REPORT TRILATERAL PROJECT 12.4 INVENTIVE STEP - 1 -

PROCEDURES FOR INVALIDATING, CLARIFYING OR NARROWING A PATENT IN THE PATENT OFFICE UNDER THE AMERICA INVENTS ACT (AIA)

(Serial No. 29/253,172) IN RE TIMOTHY S. OWENS, SHEILA M. KELLY, ROBERT M. LYNCH, IV, JASON C. CAMPBELL, and PHILIP E.

Prosecuting Patent Applications: Establishing Unexpected Results

Sughrue Mion, PLLC Washington, Tokyo, San Diego, Silicon Valley 7/2/2012

Discovery and Fact Investigation: New Patent Office Procedures under America Invents Act

Patent Prosecution. Decisions Relating to Obviousness Rejections Under 35 U.S.C. 103

Fenner Investments, Ltd. v. Cellco Partnership Impact on IPR Practice and District Court Practice

2010 KSR Guidelines Update, 75 FR (September 1, 2010) Updated PTO guidelines on obviousness determinations in a post KSR World

Patent System. University of Missouri. Dennis Crouch. Professor

USPTO Implementation of the America Invents Act. Janet Gongola Patent Reform Coordinator Direct dial:

The America Invents Act: Key Provisions Affecting Inventors, Patent Owners, Accused Infringers and Attorneys

PATENT LAW DEVELOPMENTS

Detailed Table of Contents

patents grant only the right to stop others from making, using and selling the invention

United States Patent and Trademark Office Registration Examination for Patent Attorneys and Agents October 16, Morning Session Model Answers

Working Guidelines Q217. The patentability criteria for inventive step / non-obviousness

July 12, NPE Patent Litigation. The AIA s Impact on. Chris Marchese. Mike Amon

The America Invents Act : What You Need to Know. September 28, 2011

THE SUPREME COURT'S DECISION IN

Inter Partes Review: A New Tool for Challenging Patent Validity. Dorothy Whelan and Karl Renner

America Invents Act (AIA) The Patent Reform Law of 2011 Initial Summary

Rule 130 Declarations for First-Inventor-to-File Applications

Inter Partes and Covered Business Method Reviews A Reality Check

Presented to The Ohio State Bar Association. May 23, 2012

DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS

10 Strategic Drafting of Applications for U.S. Patents by Japanese Companies from an Enforcement Perspective

Title: The patentability criterion of inventive step / non-obviousness

Reviewing Common Themes in Double Patenting. James Wilson, SPE 1624 TC

New Patent Application Rules Set to Take Effect November 1, 2007

2011 Foley & Lardner LLP Attorney Advertising Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome Models used are not clients but may be representative

RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN CLAIM CONSTRUCTION

Part V: Derivation & Post Grant Review

2012 Winston & Strawn LLP

SPECIAL REPORT May 2018 SURPREME COURT FINDS USPTO S ADMINISTRATIVE PATENT TRIALS CONSTITUTIONAL AND SETS GROUND RULES FOR THEIR CONDUCT BY THE PTAB

FEDERAL CIRCUIT DECISIONS FOR WEEK ENDING AUGUST 25, 2017

Presented by Karl Fink, Nikki Little, and Tim Maloney. AIPLA Corporate Practice Committee Breakfast Meeting May 18, 2016

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Navigating Section 112 Issues in IPR Proceedings: Using Section 112 as a Sword or a Shield

We Innovate Healthcare 1

Post-Grant for Practitioners. Evidentiary Trends at the PTAB (Part 1) May 11, Thomas Rozylowicz Principal. Steve Schaefer Principal

Venue Differences. Claim Amendments During AIA Proceedings 4/16/2015. The Patent Trial and Appeal Board

Patent Prosecution in View of The America Invents Act. Overview

Case 1:12-cv JSR Document 129 Filed 12/02/13 Page 1 of 13

America Invents Act of 2011 Part 1: Impact on Litigation Strategy Part 2: Strategic Considerations of the FTF Transition

Section 102: A Dead Letter For Qualifying Claims

USPTO Trials: Understanding the Scope and Rules of Discovery

COMPARATIVE STUDY REPORT REQUIREMENTS FOR DISCLOSURE AND CLAIMS - 1 -

Traversing Art Rejections in Nanotechnology Patent Applications No Small Task

America Invents Act Implementing Rules. September 2012

BELIZE PATENTS ACT CHAPTER 253 REVISED EDITION 2003 SHOWING THE SUBSIDIARY LAWS AS AT 31ST MAY, 2003

FEDERAL CIRCUIT DECISIONS FOR WEEK ENDING May 25, 2018

PATENT PROSECUTION STRATEGIES IN AN AIA WORLD: SUCCEEDING WITH THE CHANGES

DEVELOPMENTS IN CLAIM CONSTRUCTION

Exam Number: 7195 Patent Law Final Exam Spring I. Section 101 Patentable Subject Matter

United States Patent and Trademark Office Registration Examination for Patent Attorneys and Agents April 18, Morning Session Model Answers

Detailed Table of Contents

Post-Grant Patent Proceedings

Patent Claim Construction: Phillips v. AWH (Fed. Cir., July 12, 2005) (en banc) Edward D. Manzo August Patent in Suit

Intellectual Property: Efficiencies in Patent Post-Grant Proceedings

The New PTAB: Best Practices

PATENTING: A Guidebook For Patenting in a Post-America Invents Act World. by Beth E. Arnold. Foley Hoag ebook

Strategic Use of Post-Grant Proceedings In Light of Patent Reform

This Webcast Will Begin Shortly

KSR INTERNATIONAL CO. v. TELEFLEX INC.: Analysis and Potential Impact for Patentees

Amendments in Europe and the United States

T he landscape for patent disputes is changing rapidly.

IP CONCLAVE 2010, MUMBAI STRATEGIES WITH US PATENT PRACTICE NAREN THAPPETA US PATENT ATTORNEY & INDIA PATENT AGENT BANGALORE, INDIA

Patents and the Protection of Proprietary Biotechnology Information

Transcription:

Patent Resources Group Chemical Patent Practice Course Syllabus I. INTRODUCTION II. USER GUIDE: Overview of America Invents Act Changes with Respect to Prior Art III. DRAFTING CHEMICAL CLAIMS AND SPECIFICATION A. Disclosure of the Invention B. Guidelines for Preparing Disclosure to Set the Stage for Claims or Vice Versa 1. Define and Consistently Use Terms 2. More May Be Better to Provide Written Description Support and Enablement 3. Use Patent Profanity Judiciously 4. Focus on Claims that will be Literally Infringed and Yet Are Still Patentable Before Both the USPTO Examining Corps and PTAB and Valid in District Courts and the ITC C. Claiming the Chemical Invention 1. Determine How the Invention Differs From Prior Art and the Probable Scope of the Invention 2. A Complete Understanding of the Invention and the Prior Art Will Aid in Determining How Best to Claim It in view of the Objectives of Patentability, Validity, and Infringement 3. Make Sure the Claim Describes the Invention, Being Neither Overly Narrow nor Overly Broad! 4. Take into account enablement and written description (particularly possession in drafting claims) 5. Consider induced infringement particularly in Orange Book listed patents in the pharmaceutical arts D. Parts of the Claim 1. The Preamble 2. Transition Terms Comprising, Consisting of, Consisting Essentially of 3. Whereby 4. Jepson Claims 5. Drafting Process Claims in View of 35 U.S.C. 271(g) 6. Means plus function claims in view of 35 U.S.C. 112(f) 7. What About Metabolites? E. Specific Claiming Suggestions IV. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION: THINK IT THROUGH DURING INITIAL DRAFTING AND CERTAINLY IN PROSECUTION TO GIVE PATENTEE BASIS FOR DESIRABLE CLAIM CONSTRUCTION BEFORE PTAB, DISTRICT COURTS, AND THE ITC A. Different Standards in District Court/ITC and PTAB B. District Court Claim Construction Analysis in Litigation C. PTAB Claim Construction Analysis in AIA Post-Grant Proceedings D. Practical Considerations

1. Ordinary Meaning of Claim 2. Construing the Preamble 3. Construing Transition Terms Comprising, Consisting of, Consisting Essentially of E. Doctrine of Equivalents 1. Prosecution History Estoppel: Presumption of Surrender 2. All Elements Rule 3. Insubstantial Differences 4. Narrow Claim Language 5. Prior Art as a Limitation on Equivalents 6. Disclosed But Unclaimed Subject Matter F. Prosecution History Estoppel 1. When Does Prosecution History Estoppel Arise? 2. The Significant Distinction Between Prosecution History in Claim Interpretation and in the Doctrine of Equivalents 3. Effect of Prosecution History on Claim Interpretation 4. Effect of Prosecution History Estoppel on Scope of Equivalents Under the Doctrine of Equivalents G. Acts That Give Rise to Prosecution History Estoppel 1. Classical Prosecution History Estoppel: Amendments in Response to Prior Art Rejections 2. Estoppel by Admission: Arguments Made to Examiners Without Amendment 3. Amendments in Response to Non-Art Rejections 4. Remarks Made After Allowance 5. Multiple Arguments to Overcome Prior Art May or May Not Create Multiple Separate Estoppels 6. Failure to Continue Prosecution 7. Representations to Foreign Patent Offices? 8. Examiner Estoppel? H. Effect of Estoppel 1. Effect of Estoppel on Other Claims in Same Patent 2. Effect of Estoppel on Related Applications 3. Effect of Estoppel on Same Claims I. Specific Suggestions to Avoid and/or Minimize Chances of Prosecution History Estoppel V. 35 U.S.C. 112 A. The Second Paragraph 1. General Considerations 2. The Precision and Definiteness Requirement a. Supreme Court s Decision in Nautilus v. Biosig and Federal Circuit on Remand b. Understood By One of Ordinary Skill in the Art c. Must be Able to Tell Who Would Infringe and How d. Words of Degree e. Too Many Possible Definitions = Indefinite f. Lack of Antecedent Support Not Necessarily Indefinite g. Breadth is Not Automatically Indefiniteness h. Summary 3. Defining What the Applicant Regards as the Invention

B. The First Paragraph to Support the Claims 1. General Considerations 2. The Written Description Requirement a. General Considerations b. Development of Requirement c. Written Description Guidelines and particularly the concept of possession d. Proving Written Description Support i. General Considerations ii. Use of Knowledge of Those Skilled in the Art iii. Support for Broad Claims iv. Support for Narrowed Claims v. Using CCPA 112 cases to help you e. Lack of Written Description Support f. Reissue for Invention Unclaimed in Original Application i. Broadening and Attendant Issues ii. Narrowing and Attendant Issues iii. Reissue recapture g. Clarifying the Written Description as Understood by the POSITA as to What the Inventors Reasonably Convey (During Prosecution Also?) i. Expert Testimony ii. Inherency: Chen v. Bouchard h. New Matter: an Issue of Written Description i. Biological Deposits 3. The Enablement Requirement a. Some Essentials i. Core Requirements ii. No Need for Production Blueprint b. Procedural Aspects of the Enablement Inquiry i. Shifting Burdens ii. Enablement is Judged as of an Applications Filing Date iii. Enablement is a Question of Law c. Mechanics of the How to Make and the How to Use Requirements d. Supplementing the Written Description (During Prosecution Also?) i. Expert Testimony ii. Inherency C. The Fourth Paragraph D. The Sixth Paragraph ( 112(f)): Means plus function E. 112 Issues in chemical AIA post-grant proceedings VI. 112: BEST MODE IS STILL A STATUTORY REQUIREMENT OF 112 A. Comment on Best Mode Post-AIA: Continue to Satisfy this Statutory Requirement B. Purpose of the Best Mode Requirement C. Best Mode Distinguished From Enablement D. Determining a Best Mode Violation 1. Legal Standard 2. Relevant Time for Disclosing the Best Mode 3. Subjective Knowledge of the Best Mode a. Contemplation of a Best Mode

b. No Imputed Knowledge Within a Corporation c. Claim Scope Limitations to the Best Mode Inquiry d. Specificity of Disclosure to Those Skilled in the Art e. Best Mode Indiscriminately Disclosed f. Trade Secrets of Others Used in the Best Mode 4. Deposit of Biological Materials E. Effect of a Best Mode Violation 1. Proceedings initiated before AIA 2. Proceedings initiated after AIA VII. INEQUITABLE CONDUCT: DO NOT MISTAKENLY THINK THAT THERASENSE MOOTED THIS ISSUE A. Inequitable Conduct Doctrine Before Therasense 1. Intent: The Inconsistent Precedent 2. Materiality: Multiple Standards 3. Review of Case Law Leading Up to Therasense and Cases Cited by The Supreme Court in Therasense B. Therasense: Federal Circuit En Banc C. Post-Therasense 1. Post-Therasense Federal Circuit Decisions 2. Post-Therasense District Court Decisions 3. How Will Practitioners Respond in Prosecution? D. USPTO s Proposed Revision to Rule 56 VIII. 35 U.S.C. 102 A. Pre-AIA Section 102: Defining What Constitutes Prior Art and Determining Novelty until at Least 2034 1. Pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. 102 2. Pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. 102 What Constitutes Prior Art a. 35 U.S.C. 102(a): Acts or Works of Those Other Than the Applicant b. 35 U.S.C. 102(b): The Statutory Bar Provision i. Patents and Printed Publications ii. Public Use iii. On-Sale Activity iv. The Test v. Inherent Qualities vi. Printed Publications in IPRs, particularly with respect to non-patent literature (NPL) c. 35 U.S.C. 102(c): Abandonment d. 35 U.S.C. 102(d): Foreign Patenting e. 35 U.S.C. 102(e): Prior Art of Another f. 35 U.S.C. 102(f): Derivation g. 35 U.S.C. 102(g): Prior Invention of Another 3. What Constitutes Anticipation? a. Generally b. Reference Must Be Enabled c. Using Extrinsic Evidence/Multiple References d. Compounds and Compositions e. Genus-Species

f. No Teaching Away g. Anticipating Range Limitations i. Prior Art Teaches Species Falling Within the Claimed Range ii. Prior Art Teaches a Range Overlapping the Claimed Range iii. Prior Art Teaches a Range Falling Within the Claimed Range vi. Prior Art Teaches a Range Sharing an Endpoint With the Claimed Range h. Inherency B. AIA 35 U.S.C. 102 1. Definitions of Prior Art in AIA 102(a)(1) and (a)(2) 2. Statutory Exceptions in AIA 102(b)(1) and (b)(2), Including Expansion of The CREATE Act and Common Ownership as Exceptions 3. Transition Provisions AIA Sections 3(n)(1) and 3(n)(2) 4. Case law developing on AIA 102 2. Prior Commercial Use IX. 35 U.S.C. 103 A. The Factual Inquiries and Indicia of Graham 1. Scope and Content of Prior Art a. Analogous Art Requirements b. A Reference Must Enable What It Discloses c. Admissions of Prior Art 2. The Differences Between the Prior Art and the Claimed Invention a. Consideration of the Prior Art in Its Entirety b. Consideration of the Claimed Invention as a Whole i. The Properties and Advantages of the Invention Are Part of the Invention as a Whole ii. Functional Language in a Claim Must Not Be Ignored iii. The Preamble as a Limitation 3. The Level of Ordinary Skill in the Art 4. Objective Indicia of Nonobviousness B. The Prima Facie Case of Obviousness: A Procedural Tool of Examination But Also Appears Highly Relevant in PTAB Institution/Denial of IPR/PGR Petitions C. Responding to an Alleged Prima Facie Case by Attacking Its Premise 1. Prima Facie Obviousness in Chemical Cases 2. The Requisite Motivation Supporting the Modification a. The Prior Art Must Provide a Basis For the Modification b. Conclusion of Obviousness Cannot Derive From Applicants Specification c. Basis in the Art Need Not Be Explicit and Can Be Implied d. Inherency of a Claimed Element or Advantage of the Invention Is Immaterial e. Reason for Combining and Modifying Prior Art Can Differ From That Relied on by Applicant f. Recognition of Problem Different From Recognition of Solution g. Prior Art Teaches Away h. Asserted Prior Art References Need Not Show That Claimed Combination is Preferred Alternative i. No Obviousness Where Proposed Modification Would Destroy Intended Function of Reference

j. Conflict in Teachings of the Prior Art References k. Prior Art and Claimed Invention Do Not Share the Same Utility 3. The Prior Art Must Provide a Reasonable Expectation That the Proposed Modification Will Succeed a. Obvious to Try b. Nonrecognition of Result-Effective Variable c. Evidence Showing a Lack of Expectation of Success 4. Chemical Compounds: The Issue of Structural Similarity a. Thwarting the Presumption i. Showing the Unexpected ii. The Prior Art Must Disclose a Method of Making a Structurally Similar Compound b. Homologs i. N-methyl Derivatives ii. Methyl Substituted Aromatics iii. Aromatics iv. Alkylene Homologs c. Isomers i. Aliphatics ii. Aromatic Substitution iii. Esters iv. Optical Isomers d. Analogs i. Esters ii. Substitution of Hydrogen for Hydroxy of Ethenyl For Ethyl iii. Halogen Substitutes iv. Substitution of Sulfur For Oxygen v. Substitutions of Ring Systems vi. Substitutions on Ring Systems e. Isosterism f. Patentability of a Species Within a Genus g. Prior Art Intermediates h. Purer Forms of Old Compounds 5. Compositions and Formulations a. Claimed Compounds Plus a Carrier b. Patentability of Ranges c. Combining Equivalents Known For the Same Purpose d. Substituting Equivalents Known For the Same Purpose 6. Method of Use Claims 7. Product-by-Process Claims 8. Methods of Making Claims a. Patentability of Otherwise Routine Processes Using Patentable Starting Materials or Final Products b. Sequence of Steps c. Temperature and Concentration Limitations d. Making the Process Continuous e. Producing Expected or Unexpected Results From the Process D. Rule 132 Affidavits

E. Proof of Unobviousness 1. Unexpected Results a. Compare to Closest Prior Art and/or to the Lead Compound? b. Need Not Be Art Relied Upon by Examiner c. What if Closest Art Not Available? d. Closest Embodiment Within Closest Prior Art e. Maintain Comparison f. Closest Prior Art Need Not Be Commercial Standard g. Indirect Comparisons h. Nexus to Claimed Invention 2. Showing Must be Commensurate in Scope With the Claims, as defined in CCPA Hollingsworth 3. Other Objective Indicia of Nonobviousness a. Commercial Success b. Long-Felt Need c. Failure By Others d. Copying e. Teaching Away f. Initial Disbelief/Skepticism g. Subsequent Acclaim by Experts h. Nexus to Claimed Invention 4. Considerations Prosecution Declarations in Context of Shoring Up Claims to Survive IPR X. LESSONS FROM BIO/PHARM AND CHEMICAL INSTITUTION DECISIONS AND FINAL WRITTEN DECISIONS IN IPRs and PGRs X. DOUBLE PATENTING A. Introduction 1. Statutory Double Patenting: Same Invention Type 2. Nonstatutory Double Patenting: Obviousness Type B. 35 U.S.C. 121 and Double Patenting C. 35 U.S.C. 303 and Double Patenting D. Comparison of Earlier-Filed to Later-Filed E. Recent Chemical Double-Patenting Cases F. PTA and ODP and Common Ownership? XII. PATENT TERM ADJUSTMENT/PATENT TERM EXTENSION XIII. CHEMICAL PATENT CASE STUDIES A. Using the Prosecution History of the Cited Prior Art to Rebut Motivation to Combine References B. Use of Prior Art Reference, an Interview, and the Statement of Reasons for Allowance to Attack Prima Facie Case of Obviousness C. Establishing Knowledge of Those Skilled in the Art by a Declaration From the Author of the Prior Art D. Showing Deficiency in Prior Art References