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After Final Practice Linda M. Saltiel June 2, 2015.

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Presentation on theme: "After Final Practice Linda M. Saltiel June 2, 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 After Final Practice Linda M. Saltiel June 2, 2015

2 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL After Final Practice RCEs AFCP 2.0 Pre-Appeal Brief Review

3 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice Audit to assess increase in RCE pendency and backlog published June 30, 2014  Structural and examiner-specific issues that increase the number of RCEs  New information cited by examiners after the first Office Action  USPTO initiatives that could reduce RCEs

4 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice Average Waiting Time for Preliminary Determination YearNew Applications (Months) RCE (Months) 2009 25.8 2.0 2010 25.7 2.4 2011 28.0 4.0 2012 21.9 5.9 2013 18.2 7.8 As USPTO put incentives in place in 2010 to encourage review of new applications, RCE backlog increased

5 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice RCE Backlog  To decrease backlog, USPTO doubled the number of Examiners between 2006 and 2012  This reduced patent backlog and doubled number of first Office Actions on new patent applications, but the number of RCEs tripled  Applications reviewed by lower-grade examiners are more likely to result in RCEs than applications reviewed by higher-grade examiners  New examiners are following standard procedures

6 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice Rates of RCE filing vary by art unit  20 out of 600 art units have RCE rates exceeding 70%  Over 50 art units have RCE rates under 40%  RCE pendency varies from 100 to over 300 days There are meaningful differences across art units

7 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice Inclusion of new information is a concern for Applicants  Examiners cite new prior art during final rejection  Applicant files RCE to have response to new prior art considered The decision to cite new art by the Examiner is rarely incorrect  Examiners include references to new prior art because applicants substantively amended their claims or changed the scope of the claims

8 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice RCE Backlog  RCE backlog grew from 14,000 in January 2010 to 112,000 in 2012  The average wait time to receive an Office Action after an RCE increased from 48 days in January 2008 to 210 days in January 2013  New incentives in April 2013 reduced RCE backlog Examiner behavior is affected by production credit and docket management policies

9 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL RCE Practice RCE rate is higher among lower-grade examiners  but the decision to cite new art in a final rejection by the examiner is rarely incorrect  Need to enhanced preliminary review Examiner behavior is affected by production credit and docket management policies Retention of examiners How can Applicant help?

10 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL First Action Interview Pilot Examiner conducts a search and issues either: (1) a Notice of Allowance; or (2) a Pre-Interview Communication including a summary of potential rejections The Examiner will not examine the application out of turn. Thus, this program will not expedite when the application is initially examined Applicant will have 30 days (with a one-month extension of time being permitted) to respond to pre-interview communication An interview must be conducted within 60 days from filing the request or 90 days from issuance of the Pre-Interview Communication Failure to timely respond to pre-interview communication or responding by requesting not to interview will be treated as a request to withdraw from the pilot

11 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL First Action Interview Pilot USPTO data indicates quicker and higher allowance rate than applications not in this program Lower likelihood that an RCE will be filed Applicants should focus on improving quality of preliminary examination and the first response

12 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL After Final Consideration Pilot Applicant files an amendment that amends at least one independent claim and does not broaden the independent claims If additional search and/or consideration is required but cannot be completed within the allotted time, the examiner will process an advisory action If any additional search and/or consideration could be completed within the allotted time, then the examiner will consider the amendment. If the examiner determines that the amendment does not place the application in condition for allowance, then the examiner will contact the applicant and request an interview

13 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL After Final Consideration Pilot AFCP 2.0 reduces the likelihood that an application will result in an RCE by almost 20% Some supervisors believe that applicants do not sufficiently narrow claims and examiners do not have enough time to review after-final amendments

14 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL After Final Practice What will help reduce backlog and pendency?  Balance incentives  Improve preliminary examination of applications  Improve retention rate of examiners  Applicant participation in First Action Interview Pilot (FAIP)  After Final Consideration Pilot (AFCP 2.0)

15 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL Pre-Appeal Brief Conference Request A request for a panel of three examiners to review the application (the examiner of record, the examiner’s supervisor and a third examiner) The request must be filed with a notice of appeal and a pre-appeal brief, limited to 5 pages The request should specify: clear errors in the examiner’s rejections; or the examiner’s omissions of one or more essential elements needed for a prima facie rejection The panel will reaches one of three conclusions: 1) allow the appeal to proceed to the Board; 2) allow the application; or 3) reopen prosecution

16 ©2015 Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL Questions and Discussion


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