Clarification of the Practice for Requiring Additional Information in Petitions Filed in Patent Applications and Patents Based on Unintentional Delay

Published date02 March 2020
Citation85 FR 12222
Record Number2020-03715
SectionRules and Regulations
CourtPatent And Trademark Office
Federal Register, Volume 85 Issue 41 (Monday, March 2, 2020)
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 41 (Monday, March 2, 2020)]
                [Rules and Regulations]
                [Pages 12222-12224]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2020-03715]
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                DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
                Patent and Trademark Office
                37 CFR Part 1
                [Docket No. PTO-P-2019-0035]
                Clarification of the Practice for Requiring Additional
                Information in Petitions Filed in Patent Applications and Patents Based
                on Unintentional Delay
                AGENCY: United States Patent and Trademark Office, Department of
                Commerce.
                ACTION: Clarification.
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                SUMMARY: The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is
                clarifying its practice as to situations that will require additional
                information about whether a delay in seeking the revival of an
                abandoned application, acceptance of a delayed maintenance fee payment,
                or acceptance of a delayed priority or benefit claim was unintentional.
                DATES: The clarification of practice set forth is applicable to any
                petition decided on or after March 2, 2020.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christina Tartera Donnell, Attorney
                Advisor, Office of Petitions, by telephone at 571-272-3211; or Douglas
                I. Wood, Attorney Advisor, Office of Petitions, by telephone at 571-
                272-3231; or by mail addressed to: Mail Stop Comments-Patents,
                Commissioner for Patents, P.O. Box 1450, Alexandria, VA 22313-1450.
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Title II of the PLTIA amended the provisions
                of title 35, United States Code (U.S.C.), to implement the Patent Law
                Treaty (PLT). See Public Law 112-211, Sec. 201-203, 126 Stat. 1527,
                1533-37 (2012). Section 201(b) of the PLTIA added a new 35 U.S.C. 27,
                which expressly provides that the director of the USPTO may establish
                procedures to revive an unintentionally abandoned application for
                patent or accept an unintentionally delayed issue fee payment, upon
                petition by the applicant for patent or patent owner. See Public Law
                112-211, 201(b)(1), 126 Stat. at 1534. Section 202(b)(1)(B) of the
                PLTIA amended 35 U.S.C. 41(c)(1) to provide that the director may
                accept the payment of any maintenance fee required by 35 U.S.C. 41(b)
                after the six-month grace period if the delay is shown to the
                satisfaction of the director to have been unintentional. See Sec.
                202(b)(1)(B), Public Law 112-211, 126 Stat. at 1535-36. The 18-month
                publication provisions of the American Inventors Protection Act of 1999
                (AIPA) amended 35 U.S.C. 119 and 120 to provide that a priority claim
                for a foreign or international application and a benefit claim to an
                earlier domestic provisional or nonprovisional application must be
                filed within the period required by the USPTO, but that the USPTO may
                establish procedures to accept an unintentionally delayed priority or
                benefit claim. See Public Law 106-113, 113 Stat. 1501, 1501A-563
                through 1501A-564 (1999).
                 The USPTO revised the rules of practice to implement the 18-month
                publication provisions of section 4503 of the AIPA in September 2000.
                This included revising the rules of practice pertaining to foreign
                priority and domestic benefit claims (37 CFR 1.55 and 1.78) to set a
                time period within which such priority and benefit claims must be
                filed, and to provide for the acceptance of unintentionally delayed
                priority or benefit claims. See Changes to Implement Eighteen-Month
                Publication of Patent Applications, 65 FR 57023, 57024-25, 57030-31,
                57053-55 (September 20, 2000). The USPTO revised the rules of practice
                for consistency with the PLT and title II of the PLTIA in October 2013.
                This included revising the rules of practice pertaining to the revival
                of abandoned applications (37 CFR 1.137) and acceptance of delayed
                maintenance fee payments (37 CFR 1.378) to provide for the revival of
                abandoned applications and acceptance of delayed maintenance fee
                payments solely on the basis of ``unintentional'' delay, as well as
                revisions to the rules of practice pertaining to foreign priority and
                domestic benefit claims (37 CFR 1.55 and 1.78). See Changes to
                Implement the Patent Law Treaty, 78 FR 62368, 62377-78, 62380-83,
                62399-400, 62402-07 (October 21, 2013).
                 The provisions for the revival of an abandoned application (37 CFR
                1.137)
                [[Page 12223]]
                require a petition including, inter alia, a statement that the entire
                delay in filing the required reply, from the due date of the reply
                until the filing of a grantable petition, was unintentional, but also
                provide that ``[t]he Director may require additional information where
                there is a question whether the delay was unintentional'' (37 CFR
                1.137(b)(4)). The provisions for the acceptance of a delayed
                maintenance fee payment (37 CFR 1.378) similarly require a petition
                including, inter alia, a statement that the delay in payment of the
                maintenance fee was unintentional, but also provide that ``[t]he
                Director may require additional information where there is a question
                whether the delay was unintentional'' (37 CFR 1.378(b)(3)). The
                provisions for the acceptance of a delayed priority or benefit claim
                (37 CFR 1.55 and 1.78) likewise require a statement that the delay
                between the date the claim was due and the date the claim was filed was
                unintentional, but also provide that ``[t]he Director may require
                additional information where there is a question whether the delay was
                unintentional'' (37 CFR 1.55(e)(4), 1.78(c)(3) and (e)(3)).
                 The USPTO is clarifying its practice as to situations that will
                require additional information about whether a delay in seeking the
                revival of an abandoned application, acceptance of a delayed
                maintenance fee payment, or acceptance of a delayed priority or benefit
                claim was unintentional. Specifically, the USPTO will require
                additional information in these cases, first, when a petition to revive
                an abandoned application is filed more than two years after the date
                the application became abandoned; second, when a petition to accept a
                delayed maintenance fee payment is filed more than two years after the
                date the patent expired for nonpayment; and third, when a petition to
                accept a delayed priority or benefit claim is filed more than two years
                after the date the priority or benefit claim was due. See, e.g.,
                Changes to Patent Practice and Procedure, 62 FR 53131, 53158-59, 53161
                (October 10, 1997) (the length of the delay in filing a petition to
                revive may itself raise a question as to whether the delay was
                unintentional, and thus the USPTO may require additional information as
                to the cause of the delay when a petition to revive is not filed
                promptly). The reason for requiring additional information in cases
                where there has been an extended delay--a delay of more than two years
                from the date the application became abandoned, the patent expired, or
                a priority or benefit claim was due--until the filing of a petition, is
                to ensure that, in situations where there has been such an extended
                delay in filing the petition, the USPTO is provided with sufficient
                information of the facts and circumstances surrounding the entire delay
                to support a conclusion that the entire delay was ``unintentional.''
                 Section 711.03(c) of the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure
                (MPEP) discusses the ``unintentional'' delay standard with respect to
                petitions to revive an abandoned application, but its discussion of the
                ``unintentional'' delay is generally applicable to any petition under
                the ``unintentional'' delay standard. The USPTO usually relies upon the
                applicant's duty of candor and good faith and accepts the statement
                that the entire delay was unintentional without requiring further
                information because the applicant or patentee is obligated under 37 CFR
                11.18 to inquire into the underlying facts and circumstances when
                providing this statement to the USPTO. See MPEP Sec. 711.03(c),
                subsection II.C. An extended period of delay (i.e., more than two years
                from the date the application became abandoned, the patent expired, or
                a priority or benefit claim was due) in filing a petition to revive an
                application, accept a delayed maintenance fee payment, or accept a
                delayed priority or benefit claim, however, raises a question as to
                whether the entire delay was unintentional. This may create uncertainty
                and unpredictability relating to patent rights in that there is a
                greater likelihood that the entire delay may not be ``unintentional''
                within the meaning of 37 CFR 1.55, 1.78, 1.137, and 1.378, as compared
                to a petition that was filed within a shorter time period after the
                abandonment of the application, expiration of the patent, or due date
                for a priority or benefit claim. An applicant or patentee cannot meet
                the ``unintentional delay'' standard in 37 CFR 1.55(e), 1.78(c) and
                (e), 1.137(a), or 1.378(b) if the entire delay is not unintentional.
                See MPEP 711.03(c), subsections II.C. through F.
                 Furthermore, providing an inappropriate statement that the delay
                was ``unintentional'' may have an adverse effect when attempting to
                enforce the patent. See In re Rembrandt Technologies LP Patent
                Litigation, 899 F.3d 1254, 1272-73 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (patents held
                unenforceable due to a finding of inequitable conduct in submitting an
                inappropriate statement that the delay was unintentional). Revival of
                an application, reinstatement of a patent, or acceptance of a priority
                or benefit claim after an extended delay (i.e., more than two years
                since the date of abandonment, expiration of the patent, or due date of
                the priority claim) can also create uncertainty and unpredictability
                relating to patent rights because the abandoned status of an
                application, or the expired status of a patent, or an absence of the
                priority or benefit claim, may be relied upon by other parties.
                Requiring additional information in these situations will improve the
                reliability and predictability of patent rights by ensuring that only
                applications and patents in which the entire delay was unintentional
                are revived or reinstated, and only priority or benefit claims for
                which the entire delay was unintentional are accepted.
                 Accordingly, any applicant filing a petition to revive an abandoned
                application under 37 CFR 1.137 more than two years after the date of
                abandonment, any patentee filing a petition to accept a delayed
                maintenance fee under 37 CFR 1.378 more than two years after the date
                of expiration for nonpayment of a maintenance fee, and any applicant or
                patent owner filing a petition to accept a delayed priority or benefit
                claim under 37 CFR 1.55(e) or 1.78(c) and (e) more than two years after
                the due date of the priority or benefit claim should expect to be
                required to provide an additional explanation of the circumstances
                surrounding the delay that establishes that the entire delay was
                unintentional. This requirement is in addition to the requirement to
                provide a statement that the entire delay was unintentional in 37 CFR
                1.137(b)(4) and 1.378(b)(3), or 1.55(e)(4), or 1.78(c)(3) and (e)(3).
                 The USPTO may revisit the two-year time period established in this
                notice for requiring an additional explanation as to whether a delay is
                unintentional at a future point and may adjust the time period based on
                an evaluation of whether a two-year time period is appropriate for
                requesting additional information when determining whether a period of
                delay is unintentional. Nothing in this notice should be taken as an
                indication that the USPTO will only require additional information in
                consideration of a petition to revive an abandoned application under 37
                CFR 1.137 filed more than two years after the date the application
                became abandoned, a petition to accept a delayed maintenance fee
                payment in an expired patent under 37 CFR 1.378 filed more than two
                years after the date the patent expired, or a petition under 37 CFR
                1.55(e) or 1.78(c) or (e) to accept a delayed priority or benefit claim
                filed more than two years after the due date of the priority or benefit
                claim. The USPTO may require additional information whenever there is a
                [[Page 12224]]
                question as to whether the delay was unintentional.
                 Dated: February 18, 2020.
                Andrei Iancu,
                Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of
                the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
                [FR Doc. 2020-03715 Filed 2-28-20; 8:45 am]
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