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Basics of US Patent
Law
Author: Kaviraj
Singh, Attorney of Trustman & Co – A Law Firm at Delhi India
United States has the
most expansive patent subject matter in the world. US Patent Office
has granted patents to living organism, computer software, business
methods, new alphabets and countless.
Article 1 Section 1 Clause 8 of the US Constitution empowers
the congress to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by
securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive
right to their respective writings and discoveries. In furtherance of
the power granted by the constitution, the US Congress enacted the
first patent act in the year 1790. Though the act was amended several
times, the most important amendment came about in the year 1952, when
congress passed a new patent act codified under Title 35 of the United
States Code. Though a few changes were made in 1986, 1996 and 1999,
most provisions of the 1952 Act are still in effect.
The US Patent Law is based on the utilitarian reasoning,
which is to promote the progress of science and useful arts in general
public interest. An inventor gives an invention to the public and gets
exclusive rights over it for a limited period of time. By granting
exclusive rights to inventors for a limited period of time, the patent
law provides incentive to invent, invest, design around and disclose
which in turn encourages progress of science and technology.
Requirements for
Patentability
To be eligible for a patent, an invention should satisfy the
requirements of Patentable subject matter (Sec. 101),
a)
Usefulness (Sec. 101)
b)
Novelty
(Sec. 102)
c)
Non-obviousness (Sec. 103)
d)
Specification (Sec. 112).
Usefulness -
An invention would be eligible for a patent grant only
if it is useful (35 USC Sec. 101). The utility of the invention should
be current, substantial and credible. Speculative or future uses are
not eligible for the patent. But with regard to genetic inventions,
showing of future use is generally allowed. Inventions, which have
immoral uses, are not accepted to be useful.
Novelty -
Novelty means new. An invention in order to be patentable
should be new in the light of that exists at the time of conception of
the invention. Section 102 gives a non-exhaustive list of circumstance
that denies an invention of its newness.
Non-obviousness -
An invention to be patentable should not be obvious or known at the
time of invention. An invention is obvious, if a single prior art
reference or a combination of prior art references as a whole, make
the invention obvious to a person with ordinary skill in the art to
which the invention belongs. The invention should be obvious at the
time of conception of the invention and not at the time of contention
of obviousness.
As per the Section 103 - Obviousness of an invention will be
decided by determining the scope of the prior art, by finding out the
differences between the prior art and the claimed invention and by
ascertaining the level of ordinary skill in the art. Secondary Indicia
like commercial success, unexpected results, copying, praise of
experts, etc. could also be considered for making an obviousness
determination.
Specification - An inventor must file a patent application containing
a specification (35 USC Sec. 112). The specification should contain
written description of the invention and of the manner and process of
making and using it, in such full, clear, concise and exact terms, so
as to enable a person with ordinary skill in the art to make and use
the invention. The specification should also describe the best mode of
carrying out the invention. The written description may contain
drawings where and when required to clearly describe the invention.
The specification should conclude with one or more claims
particularly pointing out and definitely claiming the subject matter
of the invention. The claims define the metes and bounds of the
invention claimed by the inventor. The inventor gets rights only over
what is defined in the claims.
The basic requirement for patentability is that the invention
should fall within the scope of patentable subject matter as defined
under Section 101. (35 USC Sec. 101). As per section 101, any new and
useful invention or discovery, which is a process, machine,
manufacture or composition of matter is patentable. It also includes
any new and useful improvements made to an existing invention. An
invention generally falls under more than one category.
The courts have construed the terms process, machine,
manufacture and compositions of matter very broadly. In Diamond v.
Chakrabarty, the United States Supreme Court while upholding the
patentability of an oil-eating bacterium stated that everything under
the sun made by man is patentable.
Not eligible for
Patentability
The statute does not expressly bar any subject matter from
patentability, the Courts have held physical phenomenon, abstract
ideas and products of nature to be outside the scope of patentability.
An invention is not considered new or novel if the same were
on sale for more than a year before the filing date of patent
application. Selling the invention for testing deprived it of the
novelty. Even making an offer to sell or making a contract of sale for
the future is fatal to novelty of the invention and it shall not
patented.
An invention is not new if it is known or used by anyone in
the United States or printed or published in a foreign country. The
use should be publicly accessible use and not secret use.
An invention can not be patented, if the inventor had
abandoned the invention to the public. Taking an invention, which has
been dedicated to the public out of the public domain, is against the
basic objective of patent law.
An invention is not patentable if it has been patented in a
foreign country twelve months before the filing date of the present
patent application.
Priority date
As per the Section 102 – For ascertaining the priority, the
date of conception would be taken into consideration. The inventor
who conceived first and was diligent in reducing the invention to
practice would be considered as the first inventor. An invention is
not patentable if another person before the applicant has invented it.
That first inventor should not have abandoned, suppressed or concealed
his invention. |