[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 128 (Thursday, July 2, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 39888-39890]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-14244]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
[Docket No. PTO-P-2020-0027]
Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program
AGENCY: United States Patent and Trademark Office, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is
initiating the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program to provide for the
advancement of applications out of turn in ex parte appeals before the
Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB). An appellant who has filed an ex
parte appeal and received a notice that the appeal has been docketed
may file a petition, accompanied by a petition fee, to expedite the
review of his or her appeal. The Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program sets
a target of reaching a decision on the ex parte appeal within six
months from the date an appeal is entered into the Pilot Program.
DATES: Applicability Date: July 2, 2020. Duration: The Fast-Track
Appeals Pilot Program is offered on a temporary basis, and petitions to
request inclusion of an ex parte appeal in the Pilot Program will be
accepted until 500 appeals have been accorded fast-track status under
the program, or until July 2, 2021, whichever occurs earlier. The USPTO
may extend the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program (with or without
modification) on either a temporary or a permanent basis, or may
discontinue the program for either insufficient usage or after July 2,
2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven Bartlett, Patent Trial and
Appeal Board, by telephone at 571-272-9797, or by email at
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Appeals to the PTAB are normally taken up for decision in the order
in which they are docketed. See USPTO Standard Operating Procedure 1
(Sept. 20, 2018), available at https://www.uspto.gov/patents-application-process/patent-trial-and-appeal-board/resources. However, a
small number of appeals are advanced out of turn due to a special
status. For example, reexamination proceedings, which are handled by
the USPTO with ``special dispatch,'' and reissue applications are
treated as special throughout their pendency, including during appeal.
See Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP) 708.01. Applications
that have been ``made special'' during examination through a petition
based on the age or health of an applicant, or for other reasons listed
in 37 CFR 1.102 (a)-(d), also maintain their special status through any
appeal. See MPEP 1203(II). Furthermore, for the same reasons, an
appellant may also petition the PTAB to have an application on appeal
made special. See id. Currently, about 1.1% of appeals are given a
special status through one of the above methods.
The America Invents Act created a mechanism for the prioritized
examination of patent applications, which permits an applicant to
advance an application out of turn (i.e., accord special status) for
examination by filing a request accompanied by the appropriate fees.
See Changes to Implement the Prioritized Examination Track (Track I) of
the Enhanced Examination Timing Control Procedures Under the Leahy-
Smith America Invents Act, 76 FR 59050 (Sept. 23, 2011) (Track I
Notice). In view of the program's popularity and high demand, the USPTO
recently increased the yearly number of requests that may be granted
from 10,000 to 12,000. See Increase of the Annual Limit on Accepted
Requests for Track I Prioritized Examination, 84 FR 45907 (Sept. 3,
2019). In FY 2019, prioritized examination was granted for
approximately 2.7% of the total number of applications filed.
Prioritized examination status, however, does not carry through to any
appeal from a final rejection. See 76 FR 59051.
In view of the success and popularity of prioritized examination,
the PTAB is adopting, on a temporary basis, the Fast-Track Appeals
Pilot Program, under which an appellant may have any ex parte appeal to
the PTAB accorded fast-track status by filing a petition accompanied by
a fee. Under the Pilot Program, the PTAB will endeavor to issue a
decision on an ex parte appeal within six months from the date the
appeal is entered into the program. Currently, the average appeal
pendency is about 15 months. See PTAB Statistics, available at https://www.uspto.gov/patents-application-process/patent-trial-and-appeal-board/statistics. Thus, fast-track decisions on ex parte appeals under
this Pilot Program may hasten patentability determinations on new
inventions and the pace at which products or services embodying these
inventions are brought to the marketplace, thus spurring follow-on
innovation, economic growth, and job creation.
The Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program will accept petitions for
advancing out of turn and according fast-track status to ex parte
appeals for up to one year from the effective date of the program or
until 500 appeals have been accorded fast-track status under the
program, whichever occurs earlier. The threshold of 500 granted
petitions corresponds to approximately 8% of the total number of new
appeals received in the average fiscal year and was chosen in
accordance with maintaining the PTAB's overall decision pendency goals.
The USPTO will evaluate the Pilot Program at the conclusion of this
one-year period or 500-appeal threshold to determine if it should be
made permanent. Likewise, the USPTO will consider what changes, if any,
would be required to provide a sustainable mechanism for some number of
ex parte appeals to be advanced out of turn without adversely affecting
the timeliness of providing decisions on the other appeals before the
PTAB.
If the USPTO finds that the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program
adversely impacts the pendency of other appeals at any point in time
during the program's operation, then the USPTO may modify or terminate
the Pilot Program. Moreover, if the Pilot Program is not sufficiently
used, it may be modified or terminated.
Requirements for Entry Into the Pilot Program
The PTAB will accord fast-track status to a pending ex parte appeal
in accordance with the following conditions:
(1) The application must be an original utility, design, or plant
[[Page 39889]]
nonprovisional application. The Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program is not
available for applications or proceedings that are already treated as
special during appeal, such as reissue applications, reexamination
proceedings, appeals made special due to the age or health of an
applicant, or appeals subject to any other pilot program that advances
an appeal out of turn. See MPEP 708.01 for a complete list of cases
that are treated as special.
(2) Petition Requirements
A petition under 37 CFR 41.3 must be filed in the application
involved in the ex parte appeal for which fast-track status is sought
and must identify that application and appeal by application number and
appeal number, respectively. See MPEP 502.05. The petition may be
submitted via: (1) The USPTO patent electronic filing systems (EFS-Web
or Patent Center); (2) the U.S. Postal Service by Priority Mail Express
under 37 CFR 1.10 or with a certificate of mailing under 37 CFR 1.8; or
(3) hand-delivery to the USPTO Customer Service Window (MPEP 501).
Electronic submission of a petition is preferred for faster petition
processing. In addition, the appeal for which fast-track status is
sought must be an appeal for which a notice of appeal has been filed
under 37 CFR 41.31 and an appeal docketing notice has been mailed by
the PTAB.
The USPTO has created a form-fillable Portable Document Format
(PDF) ``Petition--Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program'' (Form PTO/SB/451)
for use in filing a certification and petition under 37 CFR 41.3 for
the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program. Form PTO/SB/451 is available on
the USPTO's website (http://www.uspto.gov/patent/patents-forms). Form
PTO/SB/451 does not collect ``information'' within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). See 5 CFR
1320.3(h). Therefore, this notice does not involve information
collection requirements that are subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget. Appellants are recommended to use, but are not
required to use, Form PTO/SB/451 when petitioning for entry into the
Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program. Any petition filed by any means other
than Form PTO/SB/451 must still contain the required information.
(3) Signature Requirements
The petition under 37 CFR 41.3 must be signed by an applicant who
is prosecuting the applicant's own case under 37 CFR 1.31 (except that
a juristic entity must be represented by a registered practitioner even
if the juristic entity is the applicant), a registered practitioner who
has a power of attorney under 37 CFR 1.32, or a registered practitioner
who has authority to act under 37 CFR 1.34, in order for the
application involved in the appeal to be accorded fast-track status.
(4) Fee
A petition fee of $400 under 37 CFR 41.20(a) is required at the
time the petition is filed. Due to statutory limitations on fee
collection, the USPTO may not refund the petition fee once collected.
See 35 U.S.C. 42(d) and 37 CFR 1.26(a) (permits refunds only for fees
``paid by mistake or any amount paid in excess of that required'').
Thus, no refund will be granted for any petition that does not meet the
requirements set forth above and/or is not granted for any other
reason.
(5) Limit on Number of Ex Parte Appeals Accorded Fast-Track Status
One purpose of the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program is to gauge the
public's interest in the ability to obtain a speedier resolution of an
ex parte appeal. The number of granted petitions in the Fast-Track
Appeals Pilot Program during the one-year program period is limited to
125 granted petitions per quarter, and a total of 500 granted
petitions. A ``quarter'' under this Pilot Program is defined as a
three-month period measured from the applicability date of this Notice.
For example, if this Notice has an applicability date of June 1, then a
``quarter'' under this Pilot Program spans the three months from June 1
to August 31.
The thresholds of 125 and 500 granted petitions have been chosen to
allow for robust participation in the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program
without compromising the PTAB's ability to deliver on other appeal
pendency goals. The limit of 500 granted petitions corresponds to
approximately 8% of the total number of new appeals received in the
average fiscal year. If the Pilot Program adversely impacts the
pendency of other appeals, then the USPTO may modify or terminate the
Pilot Program. Additionally, if the Pilot Program is not sufficiently
used, it may be modified or terminated.
Handling of Petitions in the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program
Petitions for entry into the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program will
be decided in the order they are received. Petitions meeting the
requirements listed above for entry into the Pilot Program will be
granted, and the petitioner will be notified by a decision granting the
petition to accord fast-track status. Petitions not meeting the
requirements listed above for entry into the Pilot Program will be
denied, and the petitioner will be notified of a decision denying the
petition. A petitioner may reapply if a first petition is denied. Any
second petition filed by a petitioner for the same application and same
appeal covered by a first, failed petition will not be accorded the
filing date of the first petition for purposes of determining whether
the second petition fell within the thresholds of 125 or 500 granted
petitions.
The PTAB will communicate the number of granted petitions for fast-
track appeal via the PTAB website, www.uspto.gov/PTABFastTrack, and
appellants should take this information into account when deciding
whether to file a petition. Consequently, appellants should consult the
PTAB's website for information on the status of the Fast-Track Appeals
Pilot Program.
The PTAB may also exercise discretion to grant a small number of
petitions in excess of the thresholds of 125 and 500 granted petitions
in a given quarter or for the year, respectively. Should a significant
number of petitions exceeding the quarterly threshold of 125 granted
petitions be filed in a quarter, those petitions may be held in
abeyance and decided, in order of receipt, in the subsequent quarter.
An appeal for which a petition is held in abeyance will not be
accelerated unless and until the petition is granted in the subsequent
quarter.
Conduct of Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program
(1) Time to Decision
The goal for rendering a decision on the petition to accord fast-
track status to an ex parte appeal is no later than one month from the
filing date of the petition. The goal for rendering a decision on the
ex parte appeal is no later than six months from the date an appeal is
entered into the program, which occurs when a petition to accord fast-
track status to the appeal is granted.
(2) When a Petition May Be Filed
A petition may be filed anytime between (1) the date when the PTAB
issues a notice that the appeal has been docketed to the PTAB, and (2)
the date at which the appellant withdraws the appeal, a final decision
is rendered by the PTAB under 37 CFR 41.50, or PTAB jurisdiction ends
under 37 CFR 41.35. Petitions for fast-track status may be filed for ex
parte appeals regardless of whether the appeal is newly docketed or was
docketed previously. If the petition complies with the formal
requirements
[[Page 39890]]
(e.g., signature, identification of application) and is accompanied by
the required fee, the appeal will be given fast-track status in
accordance with current procedures, including the quarterly and overall
program thresholds described above.
(3) Hearings
Inclusion in the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program may be requested
for ex parte appeals in which the appellant seeks an oral hearing
before the PTAB (``heard'' appeals), as well as those appeals for which
no oral hearing is requested (``on-brief'' appeals). Hearings in ex
parte appeals accorded fast-track status under the Pilot Program will
be conducted according to the ordinary PTAB hearing procedures.
Appellants seeking an oral hearing should submit with the request for
oral hearing any preferences as to the time, date, or location of the
hearing. The PTAB will make its best efforts to schedule a hearing in
accordance with such preferences, consistent with the goals of the
Pilot Program. If the PTAB is unable to accommodate an appellant's
preferences, it will schedule the hearing in an available hearing room
at any office, including a regional office, and at a time and date best
suited to meeting the goals of the Pilot Program. If no such hearing
room is available, the PTAB will schedule a hearing to be conducted by
videoconference or telephone.
Because an appellant seeks a faster decision and hearing room
availability is limited, an appellant in an ex parte appeal accorded
fast-track status may not seek to relocate (to a different office) the
hearing after receiving a Notice of Hearing. An appellant who does not
wish to attend the hearing at the designated location may, however,
request to attend the hearing by videoconference or telephone, in
accordance with current PTAB hearing procedures. An appellant may also
waive the hearing and continue under the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot
Program for consideration and decision on the briefs.
An appellant may not reschedule the date or time of a hearing and
remain in the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program. If an appellant in an
ex parte appeal accorded fast-track status must reschedule the date or
time of a hearing and is not willing to waive the oral hearing, then
the appellant may opt out of the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program,
thereby regaining the ability to reschedule or relocate the hearing as
per ordinary PTAB hearing procedures. If an appellant opts out of the
Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program for purposes of rescheduling the date
of a hearing, the appellant will not be entitled to a refund of the
petition fee.
(4) Termination of Fast-Track Status Under the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot
Program
Fast-track status will be maintained in an ex parte appeal from the
date at which the petition for inclusion in the Fast-Track Appeals
Pilot Program is granted until the PTAB's jurisdiction ends under 37
CFR 41.35(b). Activities subsequent to an appellant's withdrawal from
the Pilot Program or the PTAB's decision, including any reopened
prosecution, will not be treated as subject to fast-track status, nor
will filing a petition for inclusion in the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot
Program cause an application to be accorded fast-track status outside
the jurisdiction of the PTAB. Additionally, any request by an appellant
causing a delay in the conduct of the appeal, such as for an extension
of time under 37 CFR 1.136(b), or for additional briefing, will be
cause for removal of fast-track status without refund of the petition
fee.
Status of the Pilot Program
The Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program is being adopted on a
temporary basis until July 2, 2021 or 500 appeals have been accorded
fast-track status under the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program, whichever
occurs earlier. The USPTO may extend the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot
Program (with or without modification) on either a temporary or a
permanent basis or may discontinue the Pilot Program for adversely
interfering with the timely processing of other appeals or insufficient
usage. The USPTO will notify the public when the threshold of 500
granted petitions for the Fast-Track Appeals Pilot Program is about to
be reached, and with any further relevant information, on the PTAB
website at www.uspto.gov/PTABFastTrack.
Dated: June 19, 2020.
Andrei Iancu,
Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of
the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
[FR Doc. 2020-14244 Filed 7-1-20; 8:45 am]
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