Ok, I know that if made into a video, the subject of this post won’t sell as many copies as Girls Gone Wild, nor are its effects as wide-ranging as, say, Jon Dudas’ lame (and, mercifully, now late) attempts to circumvent the rule-making process in the USA. But for those of us who practice patent law in this neck of the woods, the Commissioner has displayed a remarkably cavalier attitude toward the very statute that creates the position he now occupies.
First, there was the announcement by the Commissioner that if an examiner has determined that an application contains claimed directed to more than one invention, then that applicant must file a divisional application along with its response to the examiner. Divisionals filed after the deadline for response will only be accepted upon payment of an extension fee for each month of “lateness” in filing. The Commissioner asserted that this policy was dictated by the statute, but it’s not clear that the statute really supports him on this point – and indeed, in the 40 or so years prior to the Commissioner’s announcement that the statute had been in force, none of his predecessors adopted this view. However, since the cost of an extension is only about $16/month, it will almost always be cheaper for an applicant to wait and see if it wants to file a divisional, and then pay the extension fees, than to pay a lawyer to challenge the Commissioner’s view.
The next month, as discussed previously in this blog, the Commissioner imposed a requirement to submit an abstract, thus foisting on the applicant a requirement that the statute imposes on the Commissioner himself.
Then we had the now-you-see-it, now-you-don’t case of Australia as a country upon which one could piggy-back under §17(c) of the statute to gain allowance of a corresponding Israel application. In December 2008 the Commissioner announced that he was taking Australia off the list because experience had shown it to be unreliable (i.e. Australian examinations weren’t very good); in September 2009, he reinstated Australia, without providing reasons. While the statute empowers the Commissioner to list and de-list foreign patent offices in this manner, it presumes he makes such determinations based on objective criteria of the quality of foreign examination. Here, the quick change of heart, without accompanying reasons, raised eyebrows. In retrospect, it appears that the change of heart was motivated not by a substantive change in the situation but by politics, as part of the Commissioner’s efforts to get Israel recognized as a PCT search authority.
Next came more extensive reporting requirements under §18 of the statute (the rough equivalent of IDS practice in the USA). §18 empowers the Commissioner to ask an applicant to provide a list of documents cited during the examination of corresponding applications elsewhere, or which are known to the applicant to be relevant to patentabilty, as well as copies of those documents. The related Rule 36(1) says that pursuant to §18, before beginning examination, the Commissioner will send a letter to the applicant asking that he provide these documents. Rule 36(2) says that when an applicant responds to such a request, he may include copies of his arguments submitted in response in the foreign jurisdiction(s). Note that this is purely at the Applicant’s discretion.
But in January of this year, the Commissioner announced that henceforth, applicants would be required to include copies of those answers, insofar as they relate to novelty and inventive step, and that failure to include such arguments would be regarded as failure to respond to the request under §18. Nevermind that the statute itself does not empower the Commissioner to request copies of arguments filed abroad. Or that in the cases of Europe and the USA, those documents will almost always be freely available over the internet, and that ILPTO examiners are already adept at finding those corresponding documents. Better to act ultra vires and impose unnecessary reporting requirements on applicants than to have Israel examiners engage in a few extra mouse clicks.
Next up, limits on the number of independent claims. About two weeks ago the Commissioner circulated another notice, this one informing people that the ILPTO would only accept two independent claims “of each type”, viz. one or independent claims on a product, one or two for a process for making the product, one or two for an apparatus for making the product, and one or two for using the product. Ostensibly the Commissioner was merely reminding the public of long-standing ILPTO practice, as most recently enunciated in a 2004 decision of this same Commissioner. However, there really is no basis in law for the arbitrary limitation of the number of independent claims; and in point of fact, I’ve personally prosecuted applications with numerous independent “Swiss” claims, which belies the assertion that this really represents long-standing ILPTO practice.
Finally, we come to this week’s gem. Rather than paraphrase the Commissioner, I translate here his entire missive:
Commissioner’s Circular No. MN81
15 February 2010, 1 Adar 5770
To: The Community of Applicants, Patent Agents and Lawyers
From: Dr. Meir Noam, Commissioner of Patents, Designs and Trademarks
Re: Division of Patent Applications
The purpose of this Circular is to inform the public of the interpretation given by the Patent Office to §24(a) of the Patents Statute, 1968 – 5728 [NOTE: this is a typo – the statute was passed in 1967; it is the Rules that were adopted in 1968 and reflect this in their title. But that’s small potatoes in the present context - DJF].
1. §24(a) states the following: “As long as the application has not been accepted [i.e., opened to the public for inspection following completion of substantive examination – similar to publication in the USPTO Gazette in the pre-18-month publication days – DJF], the applicant may demand that it be divided into individual applications.”
2. This section is given to two interpretations: one, that the parent application, and it alone, may be divided until the date of acceptance; the other, that the parent, and any application divided therefrom, may be divided until each one has been accepted.
3. The Office hereby serves notice that the interpretation which shall be adopted is that it is the parent case, and it alone, that may be divided until the date of acceptance, and this, inter alia, because of the need to conclude examination proceedings in a reasonable time and because of considerations of legal certainty for the general public.
4. This circular shall take effect as of the date of its publication on the Patent Office’s web site.
There are several difficulties with this circular. For starters, if one is already going to distinguish between a parent application and a divisional in terms of the ability to further divide, then there are actually three possibilities, not just two as stated in the Circular:
A. Both the parent and divisional can be divided, the parent until its acceptance and the divisional until its acceptance.
B. Both the parent and divisional can be divided, but the deadline for dividing in both cases is the date of acceptance of the parent application.
C. Only the parent case can be divided, and the deadline for doing so is its acceptance date.
While the Commissioner is trying to rule out A, it’s not clear from the Circular if he’s settled on B or C as the solution. (One wonders if in drafting this Circular he received assistance from some of the people at the USPTO who drafted the now-defunct claims and continuation rules, which after their publication required various clarifications of the ambiguities inherent therein.)
The bigger problem is that the statute simply doesn’t say what the Commissioner says it says. Other than giving a divisional the same filing date and priority claims as the parent case, the statute does not distinguish between a divisional and any other application; once a divisional has been filed, the statute treats it as an application like any other, including for purposes of §24(a). Were the Commissioner’s view correct, then the statute would throughout need to distinguish between divisional and parent applications. But it doesn’t.
This can be seen most acutely by comparing §24(a) to §24(b), which states “If an application contains more than one invention, the Commissioner may, as long as he has not accepted the application, order the applicant to divide his application”. The applicant then divides his application in accordance with §24(a). Now suppose that I timely file a divisional, then the parent case issues, and now the examiner says my still-pending divisional claims encompass two inventions. According to one notice already mentioned above, that constitutes an order to divide the application under §24(b). Yet according to the latest circular, I CAN'T divide the application at that point, since under §24(a) a divisional, if it can be further divided at all, can only be divided until its parent case has been accepted (“application” in §24(a) referring to the first-filed case in the series) and in this scenario I’m already past that stage.
So in this scenario I respond in either one of two ways. I could say, Mr. Examiner, you’re no longer empowered to issue an order under §24(b) – you missed the deadline to tell me to divide the application, since the parent case was already accepted, and “application” in §24(b) refers to the same parent application as does §24(a). Or I could respond, Mr. Examiner, you’re empowered to tell me to divide the application, since the terms “application” and “accept”, respectively, in §24(a) and §24(b) mean different things, but now you’ve given an order with which I can’t comply, since §24(a) prohibits me from dividing my application after its parent has already been accepted.
The second answer makes no sense. Why would the statute use similar phrasing in §24(a) and §24(b), yet have that phrasing mean completely different things in the two contexts? And why would the statute empower the Commissioner to order an applicant to do something that the statute in the immediately preceding line prohibits?
But the first answer makes no sense either: inasmuch as §8 stipulates that a patent shall be granted on only one invention, clearly the Commissioner must be able to tell applicants to divide their applications whenever he finds that an application is directed to more than one invention.
In addition to the logical inconsistencies with the Commissioner’s position, it’s also interesting to note that in the over 40 years since adoption of the statute, not once has any previous commissioner or any court ruled that the time limit for filing a divisional of a divisional is the publication date of the parent case, let alone that filing a divisional of a divisional is verboten. And given the large number of pre-grant patent oppositions filed in Israel, if indeed the filing of a divisional of a divisional was impermissible under the statute, surely someone would have cited this as grounds to oppose the grant of a divisional-of-a-divisional. But that hasn’t happened either. How reassuring to know that after 40-some years, this Commissioner has finally gotten it right. And that he will no doubt have to entertain some opposition or revocation actions against divisionals-of-divisionals on the grounds that they were improperly filed. (One wonders if he’ll be willing to refund, with interest, all the examination, publication and renewal fees paid by those applicants over the years for those divisionals-of-divisionals that he maintains the ILPTO should never have accepted in the first place.)
Finally, we have paragraph 4 of the circular. This paragraph isn’t problematic so much as telling. When one enacts a new policy that changes the status quo, that policy needs a starting date. But if we’re talking about statutory interpretation, jurisprudential theory says that that interpretation has always been the correct one. If indeed §24(a) says that one can’t file a divisional of a divisional, or that one can but the time limit for doing so is the publication of the grandparent case, then §24(a) has said this since it was adopted and came into force in 1967. We don’t need to be told the proper interpretation of this section this in 2010, let alone be told when this interpretation will come into force.
Thus the inclusion in the Circular of a paragraph announcing a starting date is a sort of Freudian slip. This inclusion suggests several things. It suggests that the Commissioner doesn’t believe what he wrote. It suggests that that he knows full well that divisionals-of-divisionals are permissible, and that the deadline for filing a divisional from an existing divisional application is the acceptance date of the existing divisional, not of the grandparent case. And it suggests that that he knows the issue of “interpretation” is merely a fig-leaf meant to mask his disregard for the plain meaning of the statute, and for the democratic process. I’m not fooled.
I am, however, insulted. There may be arguments to be made for and against allowing divisionals of divisionals (though I can’t really come up with a good argument against; the fact that the EPO isn’t fond of them means they’re probably a good idea). But hitherto Israel has allowed them, and the statute that permits such filings remains unchanged. If anyone feels that the policy embodied in the statute should be changed, they are free to make their arguments in the public sphere and to lobby the Knesset to change the statute. It is not the place of an unelected bureaucrat, whose position is an administrative and quasi-judicial one, to usurp the prerogatives of the public and the public’s elected representatives, and to arrogate for himself the role of policy-maker. That Dr. Noam acts as if he may do so constitutes a slap in the face to the Israeli public.
Then again, maybe the Commissioner just views this as good business: after convincing the powers-that-be to allow the ILPTO to undertake a significant hiring increase in the last several years, and following a significant drop in the number of new applications filed in Israel in 2009, the Commissioner may be looking for ways to increase the ILPTO’s workload, so all those examiners don’t sit there twiddling their thumbs. But if that’s the case, why require applicants to do the examiners’ work for them by providing examination reports and responses from abroad?
Unlike the Commissioner’s other forays into ultra vires land, I believe that this one has a reasonable chance of being directly challenged. It’s not inconceivable that a pharmaceutical company will have a third-generation divisional application that it wants to get on file; or perhaps an adverse party will challenge an application or a patent on the grounds that it is a third-generation divisional.
On the other hand, maybe here too Dr. Noam will side-step the bullet. Most pharma patents in Israel are handled by a few large offices, who will be more than happy to advise their clients that all divisionals need to be filed before the parent case is accepted – a position that just happens to align with those offices’ interests in cash flow.