With full credit to The Law Office of Michael E. Kondoudis, PC
posted on
Jul 01, 2008 02:28PM
© 2008, Michael E. Kondoudis
In an earlier post, I discussed the Office’s policy of compact prosecution and how that policy affects patent prosecution in the USPTO. Under that policy, second Office actions are usually made final, except in limited circumstances. Consequently, except for an allowance or an indication of allowable subject matter, a response that triggers a non-final Office action is often the best result an Applicant can expect. After all, forcing the Office to deviate from its policy of compact prosecution is usually evidence of effective patent prosecution, particularly when a non-final Office action is triggered without a claim amendment.
A Problem - Successive Non-Final Office Actions That Do Not Advance Prosecution
In some cases, however, second, third, or fourth non-final Office actions are arguably the result of poor Office action quality rather than the quality of the patentability arguments. These Office actions are problematic because they don’t advance an application or even provide practical measures of potential patentability, yet they require formal responses. Thus, Applicants incur the expenses of responses without the benefit of advancing prosecution.
A common example of this circumstance is a first non-final Office action that applies poor art. Sometimes, after an Applicant traverses the art rejections with patentability arguments and/or claim amendments that amount to no more than a rewrite of an original independent claim to incorporate an original dependent claim, the Applicant receives another non-final Office action (with new art) and the cycle is repeated.
This post addresses this atypical but vexing situation in which an Applicant is required to respond to successive non-final Office actions that aren’t advancing prosecution. To be clear, this post is NOT intended to address all successive non-final Office Actions. Rather, this post discusses some suggestions for escaping the administrative “purgatory” of successive non-final Office Actions that do not advance prosecution.
By Design or the Result of Ex Parte Prosecution?
Some practitioners, at least anecdotally, seem to be of the opinion that this could be an intentional practice by some art groups in the USPTO, intended to wear down applicants and get them to either: unduly limit their claims rather than seeking protection for the full scope of their inventions; or to abandon their cases. Others are of the opinion that this is the result of the sometimes inefficient process of ex parte prosecution and that Examiners cannot allow claims that they believe to be unpatentable.
Options to Consider
1. Consider An Appeal
One option might be to appeal at least some of the rejections. An applicant whose claim has been twice rejected may appeal, regardless of whether the claim is under a final rejection. See MPEP § 1204. So, if any claim has faced the same rejection two times, appeal is an option.
2. Consider an Interview
An Examiner interview is almost always an effective tool to advance prosecution. Sometimes an Examiner misses novel features of the claims or misunderstands a patentability argument. An interview is opportunity to meet the Examiner and to refocus prosecution.
3. Remind the Examiner of The Office’s Instructions for Art Searches
The MPEP establishes guidelines for art searches and the goals of these searches. For example, Section 904.02 of the MPEP, entitled General Search Guidelines, advises Examiners that:
Further, Section 904.03 of the MPEP, entitled Conducting the Search, instructs that:
This section goes on to warn that:
(emphasis added). Finally, Section 904 warns that the examiner should cite only the best discovered art.
If anyone else has other strategies or suggestions to address this circumstance, I invite you to share them with other readers in the comments section.