As noted in an earlier posting, on December 1, 2009, the Knesset’s Constitution, Statute and Law Committee approved the imposition of a fee of 500 shekels (approximately $130 at present exchange rates) for each claim in excess of 50. Now, you’d think that even the Knesset and the Justice Ministry (which drafted the actual wording of the update) could get something as simple as this right, but noooooo – they had to word it in a way that sows confusion. To wit:
Notice of the amended regulations was published in the official state publication journal (the equivalent of the Federal Register in the USA) on December 24, 2009; the new regulations will take effect 30 days from publication, viz. on January 23, 2010. The amended regulations (namely the Second Schedule), in relevant part, read as follows:
Second Schedule
(A) 1. Upon submission of an application for patent per §11(a) of the statute, 1021 NIS
1A. Fee for submission of each claim in a patent application beginning with the 51st claim, 500 NIS * * *
This brings us to our first problem: while the revised regulations say that the fee for the first 50 claims for an application filed under §11(a) of the Patents Law is due upon filing of the application (a position necessitated by §15 of the statute, which says that an application will not be accorded a filing date until the filing fee has been paid), and that the fee for each claim in excess of 50 is 500 shekels, the amended regulations do not say when the fee for each excess claim is due. If the excess claims fees are due upon filing, then applicants will need to carefully consider how many claims to file. But if the payment of excess claims fees can be deferred until later, why not file a gazillion claims and then decide how to proceed once you’ve seen how things are progressing in the corresponding cases in Europe and the USA?
In a letter sent out on January 7, 2010, the Commissioner apparently tried to clarify this point: “The obligation to pay the fee [for excess claims] commences at the time of the filing of the patent application or at the time the specification is amended to include more than 50 claims. Such an amendment is predicated upon payment of the appropriate fee.” This implies that as soon as an application is filed with excess claims, the excess claims fees are due, even though the amended regulation does not state this.
However, the Commissioner’s letter goes on to state that “failure to pay the fee for claims 51 and up will result in delay of examination of the application until the fee is paid”, implying that the excess claims fees themselves are not due upon filing, but only when the applicant actually wants examination to proceed. Hence, writes the Commissioner, the language of the pre-examination letter that is sent to applicants shortly before substantive examination commences “will be updated…to remind the patent applicant community to pay the entirety of the fee due before the application comes up for examination.”
Thus, the Commissioner’s latter statements imply that applicants who file applications with more than 50 claims but do not pay the excess claims fees at the time of filing, then cancel the excess claims prior to the commencement of substantive examination, will not be required to pay the excess claims fees, ever (unless they re-insert the excess claims later).
Nothing like taking what should be a straightforward amendment and making it unnecessarily complicated. Presumably this matter will be clarified in the near future; personally, it seems to me that if the excess claims are cancelled prior to examination, an applicant shouldn’t have to pay for them, as the ILPTO hasn’t had to expend any extra resources examining the extra claims. (By the same token, if the excess claims were already allow by the USA or the EPO, and the applicant request allowance under §17(c), I don’t see why the applicant should have to pay excess claims fees, as the Israel examiner isn’t going to have to do any real work anyway.)
Now for the second bit of confusion: it is unclear if the new regulations apply to the national phase of PCT applications filed in Israel. How’s that? Well, amended part (A)1 of the Second Schedule, which refers to the filing fee for the first fifty claims, refers to applications filed under §11(a) of the statute. But national phase applications are filed under §48(d), not §11(a). Thus part (A)(1) clearly does not apply to national phase applications.
Moreover, part (A)7 of the Second Schedule, which sets the fee for the filing of national phase applications filed under §48(d), was not amended accordingly to refer to the first fifty claims. The failure to amend part (A)7 could thus be taken as indicating that excess claims fees are not to be imposed on national phase applications.
On the other hand, new part (A)1A does not refer to a particular section of the statute, and simply sets a “Fee for submission of each claim in a patent application beginning with the 51st claim”. Part (A)1A could thus be viewed as setting excess claims fees for national phase applications as well – although if that’s the case, why amend (A)1 at all? And why number this statement (A)1A rather than place it elsewhere, where it will be clear it’s applicable to both regular and national phase applications?
I have no doubt the ILPTO will adopt the view that excess claims fees are due for national phase applications. Any national phase applicants who would like to test this by filing an application with 51 claims and then fight the ILPTO over the charge for the 51st claim are invited to contact me – I would be willing to fight the ILPTO on this point pro bono.
On the bright side, there’s one point that doesn’t seem to be confusing: it appears from the Commissioner’s letter that the ILPTO will allow applicants who originally paid for excess claims to cancel some of those excess claims and substitute them with others. Thank goodness for small favors.