1 / 12

ARGUING YOUR APPEAL BEFORE A PANEL OF THE BPAI IN AN INTER PARTES REEXAMINATION

ARGUING YOUR APPEAL BEFORE A PANEL OF THE BPAI IN AN INTER PARTES REEXAMINATION. Kevin F. Turner Administrative Patent Judge Board of Patent Appeals & Interferences United States Patent and Trademark Office. Outline of Discussion. Today, we will discuss:

gambhiri
Download Presentation

ARGUING YOUR APPEAL BEFORE A PANEL OF THE BPAI IN AN INTER PARTES REEXAMINATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ARGUING YOUR APPEAL BEFORE A PANEL OF THE BPAI IN AN INTER PARTES REEXAMINATION Kevin F. Turner Administrative Patent Judge Board of Patent Appeals & Interferences United States Patent and Trademark Office

  2. Outline of Discussion • Today, we will discuss: • Whether an oral hearing is appropriate • Things to consider about oral hearings • Some “do’s and don’ts” (from the Board’s perspective)

  3. IS IT NEEDED? • 37 CFR §41.73(a) An oral hearing should be requested only in those circumstances in which appellant considers such a hearing necessary or desirable for a proper presentation of the appeal. An appeal decided on the briefs without an oral hearing will receive the same consideration by the Board as appeals decided after an oral hearing.

  4. IS IT NEEDED? • Appellants or Respondents may be better served by not appearing, based solely on their briefs • Cross appeals by Third Party Requesters or Patent Owners may not need oral arguments • Attending the hearing may provide as much feedback as arguing • In cases of merged proceedings, may already have enough “cooks”

  5. THINGS TO CONSIDER • Limited Time • In IPR, each party is limited to 30 minutes, which usually includes questions from the panel • Limited to Arguments Previously Raised • Judges often inquire about where a particular argument can be found in the brief • Exceptions in certain circumstances See 37 CFR §41.73(e)(2) – recent relevant decision

  6. THINGS TO CONSIDER • Open to the Public • Unless a petition under 37 CFR §41.3 has been granted, based on “sufficient reasons,” everyone gets to come • Visual Aids • Must already be in the record or they will not be considered • Judges have the electronic file in front of them • Must make a request beforehand (AV)

  7. THINGS TO CONSIDER • In person, or via telecommunications • The Board has the capability to hear cases telephonically or through video conference • Structure of oral arguments • Not every issue in a brief may be covered in the time allotted • Issues that are more nuanced should be emphasized • Arguments that require visualization may be best served through oral hearings

  8. Do’s • Be on time • multiple cases are heard on same day • Be courteous to the opposing party and Board personnel (& the Examiner, potentially) • Study and consult the statutes and rules • appealable versus petitionable, for example • Be knowledgeable of the record and where the sources of arguments originate

  9. Do’s • Presume that the panel has spent considerable time studying the issues and facts in the case, and in many instances, may have already formed some initial impressions about the issues • Expect questions you might not have considered • “What’s your best argument?” • “What if we remand this case?” • “Hypothetically . . .” • “How can we provide the relief you seek?”

  10. Don’ts • Don’t read from a script • Generally a waste of time because rarely, if ever, does it address the questions that the judges have on their minds • Don’t ignore or sidestep questions from the bench • Questions often indicate concerns the judge may have in ruling in your favor • If you don’t know, or don’t have an answer, you should so state

  11. Don’ts • Don’t request a change in hearing date or time unless exceptional circumstances (“convincing reasons”) • Don’t expect to rely on oral testimony • One party argues (but can have multiple advocates) • Inventors and experts remain sidelined (unless pro se advocate)

  12. Thank You Q & A

More Related