sm © 2012 patterson thuente christensen pedersen, p.a., some rights reserved - disclaimer: this...

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SM © 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., some rights reserved - www.ptslaw.com DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information contained herein is intended for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. Seek competent legal counsel for advice on any legal matter. Treaty Obligations Pertaining to Patentable Utility Jay A. Erstling Comparative Intellectual Property Law Symposium April 4, 2012 TM

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Page 1: SM © 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., some rights reserved -  DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information

SM

© 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., some rights reserved - www.ptslaw.com

DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information contained herein is intended for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. Seek competent legal counsel for advice on any legal matter.

Treaty Obligations Pertaining to Patentable Utility

Jay A. Erstling

Comparative Intellectual Property Law SymposiumApril 4, 2012

TM

Page 2: SM © 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., some rights reserved -  DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information

Overview

Harmonization in a global economy

Treaties & international agreementsParis Convention

PCT

PLT

TRIPS

NAFTA

What does it all mean?

April 4, 20122

Page 3: SM © 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., some rights reserved -  DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information

Harmonization in a Global Economy

Pursuing patent protection in multiple jurisdictions is increasingly commonUpward trend in total patent families since 1994

Number of foreign-origin patent families more than doubled from 1985 to 2008

Filings by residents: US (49.4%), EPO (49.3%) and Canada (12.8%)

Approximately 164,300 PCT applications were filed in 2010

• 1978-2004 to reach one million PCT applications in total

• 2004-2011 to reach two million

“Harmonization” sometimes a dirty word but increasingly desired by many patent stakeholders to increase efficiency and quality while reducing costs and delay

April 4, 20123

Page 4: SM © 2012 Patterson Thuente Christensen Pedersen, P.A., some rights reserved -  DISCLAIMER: This presentation and any information

Paris Convention

1883

Administered by WIPO

174 contracting parties, including US, the countries of Europe and Canada

Creates priority right

Focus on national treatmentRequires that each contracting state grant the same protections to nationals of other contracting states as it grants to its own nationals

Does not specifically address “utility”

April 4, 20124

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Patent Cooperation Treaty

1978

Administered by WIPO

144 contracting parties (i.e., member countries)

Created to provide applicants with a user-friendly, cost-effective and efficient system for filing international patent application

Addresses “industrial applicability” Considered to be synonymous with “utility”

Specific, substantial and credible utility

April 4, 20125

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Patent Cooperation Treaty

Sets forth harmonizing requirements for international applicationsInternational application has the same legal effect as a national application in each member country

International application then subject to same national law and requirements as a national application filed in that country

Article 27(1) prohibits member countries from imposing form and contents requirements different from or in addition to those of the PCT on the international application; form and contents mean:

Physical requirements and identification data

Form and manner of describing and claiming

April 4, 20126

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Patent Cooperation Treaty

UtilityRule 5.1 of the Regulations:

• Indicate explicitly, when it is not obvious from the description or nature of the invention, the way in which the invention is capable of exploitation in industry and the way in which it can be made and used, or, if it can only be used, the way in which it can be used

Sole exception: sequence listing required for nucleotide and/or amino acid sequence disclosures (Rule 5.2)

If a member country requires evidence of utility in a particular form, it may only oblige the applicant to furnish that evidence during prosecution in the national phase

Contracting states can prescribe substantive conditions on patentability, but cannot do so in a way that constitutes requirements as to application form and contents

7 April 4, 2012

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Patent Law Treaty

2000

Administered by WIPO

US and Canada have signed but not ratified; many EPO countries are member states (32 contracting parties in all)

Extends PCT form and contents requirements to all patent applications, not just international applications

Prohibits member countries from demanding compliance with any form and content requirement other than those of the PCT

Limits member country patent office authority to require applicants to file evidence only where that office may reasonably doubt the veracity of that matter

April 4, 20128

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Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights – TRIPS

1994

US, Europe and Canada are obligated (153 WTO members in total)

Non-discrimination is a core goalTechnological field of an invention

Place of creation

Locally produced or imported

Provides flexibilitiesCompulsory licensing of pharmaceuticals

But does not permit differential treatment in treatment of patent applications

April 4, 20129

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TRIPS

Doha Declaration2001 (and Decision of the General Council of 2003)

Developing countries concerned about overly narrow reading of TRIPS by developed countries

Reaffirmed flexibility of member states with respect to patent rights in order to provide better access to essential medicines

Decisions of the WTO dispute resolution bodies have held members to high standards of compliance

Recent efforts by WTO, WIPO and WHO to balance interests of developing and industrialized countries

April 4, 201210

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NAFTA

1992

US, Canada and Mexico

Very similar to TRIPS with respect to patents and intellectual property

April 4, 201211

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What does it all mean?

Form and contents requirements are distinct from substantive requirementsPCT member countries cannot impose additional form and contents requirements

Also cannot impose substantive requirements that, in effect, impose additional form and contents requirements

Substantive requirements that relate to content of foreign-origin priority document can have the effect of discriminating against foreign-origin patent applications

Patent systems should not be manipulated to implement policy Policy issues should be addressed transparently

April 4, 201212

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Questions?

Jay A. Erstling

April 4, 201213

Patterson Thuente IP

612.349.5740

[email protected]

William Mitchell College of Law

651.290.7533

[email protected]