2001 Duty of Disclosure, Candor and Good Faith
|
Section Frequency Chart
Key |
|
|||||
2001 | ||||||
2001.01 |
(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 The duty to disclose information exists with respect to each pending claim until the claim is canceled or withdrawn from consideration, or the application becomes abandoned. Information material to the patentability of a claim that is canceled or withdrawn from consideration need not be submitted if the information is not material to the patentability of any claim remaining under consideration in the application.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 §§ 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.
(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.
-What is the duty to disclose?
-the duty does not depend on the likelihood that an examiner would find the art independently
-information is material to patentability when:
- it establishes a prima facie case of unpatentability to a claim
- it refutes or is inconsistent with a position the applicant takes
-the incentive to submit information to a strengthen the patent and avoid later questions of materiality and the intent to deceive
- in addition, even an issued patent may be withdrawn from issue because one or more claims are unpatentable
-no patent will be granted on an application in which fraud on the Office occurred or the duty of disclosure was violated through bad faith or intentional misconduct
-Information included under the duty to disclose:
-information material to an invention (duty to disclose) includes more than just patents and printed publications
-the duty applies to all presently known information, such as:
- information on possible prior public uses, sales, offers to sell, derived knowledge, a prior invention by another, inventorship conflicts, etc...
- information known in the past may not fit under the duty to disclose because it may not be realized that the information is relevant to the present application
- the rules are not intended to require information favorable to patentability such as evidence of commercial success of the invention
-if a particular inventor has different applications pending in which similar subject matter, but patentably indistinct claims are present, each of the involved applications must be disclosed to the examiner
-information from a related litigation must be brought to the attention of the examiner
-sources of information may include:
- co-workers
- trade shows
- communications from or with competitors
- potential infringers
- third parties
- related foreign applications
- related litigations
- preliminary examination searches
-When does the duty to disclose exist?
-the duty to disclose exists until the application becomes abandoned
-the duty does not end when an application becomes allowed, but extends until a patent is granted on that application
-the rules provide for information to be considered even after a Notice of allowance is mailed
-if information is sent in before the issue fee is paid, the application may be withdrawn from issue and abandoned so that the relevant information may be considered in a continuing application