J. Gordon ThomsonProfessional Corporation
Barrister, Solicitor & Notary Public (Ontario)Registered Patent Agent (Canada & USA)
Registered Trade-mark Agent (Canada & USA)
1353 Mountainside Crescent, Ottawa, Ontario K1E 3G5Phone: 613 834 6166
Fax: 613 834 6167E-mail: [email protected]
www.creative-intellect.com
SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND
(…but hopefully not!)
Invention Disclosure Patentability Searches and Opinions
Is a search necessary?
There is no legal requirement to search the prior art prior to filing.
If you are intimately familiar with the field then a search is probably not necessary
If the invention is an improvement to a previously filed invention then a search is probably not necessary
Recommendations
1. You should make (or have made) a thorough patentability search before your decide to file a patent application
2. The patentability search should be done with the commercial evaluation
Reasons for a Search
1. Determine if a patent is reasonably achievable
2. Avoid wasting money on an application that may fail
3. Discover relevant prior art references that will make drafting easier
4. Discover prior art that will help you improve the invention
Reasons for a Search
5. To learn more about inventions that worked and attained commercial success
6. To distinguish your invention from the prior art
7. To determine the novel features of the invention
8. To present search results to potential investors and licensees
Reasons for a Search
9. Locate prior art that the Examiner might miss (Duty to disclose)
10.Determine potential infringement of in-force patents
WHO DOES THE SEARCH?
DIY – The inventor can usually do a good search but know when to stop
Searcher Unlicensed Located in CIPO or USPTO
Agent/Lawyer Familiar with the legal requirements Familiar with drafting Familiar with you
SEARCH STRATEGIES
Where to search:Canada – CIPO online databaseUSA – USPTO online databaseOther countries? BudgetDelphionDerwentWIPO
SEARCH STRATEGIES
How to Search By classification By key word
Prerequisites for a Patent
UtilityNoveltyInventive Step
UTILITY
An invention must have some use. That is, it must have utility, be of some commercial or industrial value and be of some benefit to the public. The invention must also be practically fit for the purpose described in the invention and it must do what the inventor promised it would do. When patent claims are based on results that fail, a patent will not issue.
NOVELTY
An invention must be new and novel, that is, never previously disclosed to the public. An invention is called “anticipated” if it has been previously disclosed in the prior art. The invention must be different than all other devices, considered individually, in the art to which the invention applies. This is a relatively objective test hence easier to apply than the obviousness test.
NOVELTY ANALYSISEntire invention must be disclosed in a single piece
of prior art
NEW 012 123 234 345
A A A
B B B B
C C C C
D D
INVENTIVENESS
An invention must be inventive. That is, it must be a step forward in the art of the field of the invention. An invention that lacks inventiveness is considered to be obvious and not patentable. An invention is inventive if it would not be obvious to a person “skilled in the art” of the field of the invention in view of all the available prior art at the time of the filing of the patent application. The prior art may be “mosaiced” together. This means several patents may be considered in any reasonable combination to determine if the invention would be obvious to a person skilled in the art. Mere workshop improvements to an existing invention are not considered to be inventive. The lack of inventiveness is fatal to patentability. This is a subjective test and a difficult one to satisfy during a patent examination.
OBVIOUSNESS ANALYSISPrior art may be mosaiced Entire invention must
be disclosed in a single piece of prior art
NEW 012 123 234 345
A A A
B B B B
C C C C
D D
SEARCH REPORT/OPINION CONTENTS
Introduction Summary
Brief description of your invention Conclusions
Limitations of this Search and Opinion Background
What is the problem? How does your invention solve it?
SEARCH REPORT/OPINION CONTENTS
Classification of the Invention Primary class description Sub-class description
Search strategy Where Key words used Classes searched
List of relevant prior art patents Copies included
SEARCH REPORT/OPINION CONTENTS
The test for patentability Proper subject matter Usefulness Inventiveness/Obviousness Novelty/Anticipation Meeting formalities
Discussion and analysis of prior art Conclusions Recommendations