Post Position can clinch a patent race
By John S. Ferrell, Chairman, Intellectual Property Practice
Group, Carr & Ferrell LLP
On Valentine's morning in 1876, Alexander Bell filed an application
for the telephone – which was to become one of the most
valuable patents ever issued. By incredible coincidence, Elisha
Gray arrived at the patent office later that same day with
his independently developed telephone invention. After years
of litigation, Bell received the patent, launching the modern
telecommunications industry. Gray slipped into relative obscurity.
Of the 170 or so countries that issue patents on new and
useful inventions, nearly all but the United States and the
Philippines award patents to the first inventor to file an
application. Under U.S. law, patent ownership is granted to
the first person to invent a new product or method, and not
to the first to file the application. But don't be fooled
by the letter of the law, like Elisha Gray, if you are late
to the U.S. patent office, you will face an uphill battle
to win ownership of the patent.
Recently, eBay was ordered to pay MercExhange a whopping
$29.5 million for infringement of a method patent for operating
the equivalent of an online flea market. Inventor Thomas Woolston
filed his first MercExchange patent application in April of
1995. ebay launched and filed for its own patents only a few
months later. Woolston received the patent, and now, in addition
to a large payday for past infringement, will either receive
on-going royalties from eBay or will force eBay to change
its business model.
The legal process for disputing competing patents is called
an interference proceeding. The rules are arcane, the costs
high, and the last person to file—called the junior
party—starts this wrestling match from a truly inferior
position. The essence of inventorship in the U.S. is that
the patent is awarded to the inventor who can prove the first
conception of the idea and the diligent reduction of the idea
into practice. It is not enough to conceive of the idea first
and subsequently sit on the idea for years or even months,
while another inventor files an application. For most inventors,
producing meaningful proof of idea conception is very difficult,
and often the filing of the patent application is the first
clear documentation of the invention.
The best advice for any entrepreneur then is to file early
and to file often. Filing patent applications on developing
ideas does not need to be expensive. A provisional patent
application can be self-prepared and filed with the patent
office for around the $80 filing fee. Provisional applications
can be thought of as place-holder applications, and while
they are never examined by the patent office, they provide
a filing priority date for invention details provisionally
disclosed. |