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Follow on Google News | The New Way to Challenge A Patent When Threatened, America Invents Act Creates the Post Grant ReviewThe Post Grant Review is an entirely new inter partes procedure permitting third parties to challenge the validity of an issued or reissued U.S. patent.
By: IP Law Leaders This article covers the basics of the Post Grant review. The PGR is an entirely new inter partes procedure permitting third parties to challenge the validity of an issued or reissued U.S. patent. Unlike a reexamination, which is limited in scope to prior art patents and printed publications under 35 U.S.C. §§ A PGR petition may be filed by any party who is not an owner of the patent and has not filed a civil action challenging the validity of the patent. The review is limited in duration to the nine-month period following the grant of a patent or issuance of a reissue patent. Specifically, the PGR petition must be made on or before this nine-month date. The review authority has changed as well. Prior to AIA, post-grant review proceedings – namely inter partes and ex parte reexaminations, were reviewed by the examining corps of Central Reexamination Unit of the USPTO, essentially a specialized patent examining unit. Parties dissatisfied with the Unit’s decision would seek relief by appeal to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences. With the new post-grant review proceedings, PGR (and IPR) is decided by the newly formed Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB), eliminating review proceedings by the USPTO examining corps. Appeals from Board decisions go directly to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, the highest authority for U.S. patent cases aside from the Supreme Court, itself. The standard for instituting a Post Grant Review is that the petitioner must either (1) demonstrate that it is more likely than not that at least one of the challenged claims is not patentable or (2) show that the petition raises a novel or unsettled legal question that is important to other patents or patent applications. The Board may take into account whether the same or substantially same prior art were previously presented to the Office. A PGR may not be instituted if the petition is filed after the petitioner filed a declaratory judgment action challenging the validity of a claim of the patent. In fact, filing the PGR petition under these circumstances automatically stays the declaratory judgment action, and the stay may be lifted only under certain circumstances, namely if the patent owner moves to lift the stay, the patent owner files an infringement suit or counterclaim for infringement, or if the petitioner moves to dismiss the civil action. Notably, counterclaims of invalidity typically brought by defendants, where the infringement claims are brought by the patent owner (i.e., a typical patent infringement suit) have no bearing on the defendant's ability to file a PGR. Contact: Cameron H. Tousi Managing Director IP Law Leaders PLLC Tel: 202-248-5410 Web: iplawleaders (dot) com Email: cameron (at) iplawleaders (dot) com ABOUT IP Law Leaders PLLC IP Law Leaders (IPLL) is a nationally recognized intellectual property boutique firm, representing leading corporations, startup companies and research associations worldwide. Quality IP representation can be affordable, and we prove it every day. End
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