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PCT Patent Attorney India
India deposited its
instruments of accession to the Paris Convention for the
Protection of Industrial Property and to the Patent
Co-operation Treaty on September 7, 1998. Since December 7,
1998, it has been possible to designate India in PCT
applications and to elect India in the demand for preliminary
examination. If India is a designated country in the PCT
application and is also elected in the demand for preliminary
examination filed within 19 months of the priority date, then
the deadline for entry into the National Phase in India is 31
months from the Priority Date. If the applicant does not so
elect India in the demand for preliminary examination, then
the deadline for entry into the National Phase in India is 21
months from the Priority Date. As such, all applicants who
have designated India in their PCT application filed on or
after December 7, 1998, will be able to file PCT National
Phase applications in India.
PCT What it is
Pct is the acronym for Patent
Cooperation Treaty (PCT), a sister Treaty of the Paris
Convention administered by the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO). It facilitates filing of patent
applications under a single umbrella and provides for
simplified procedure for the search and examination of such
applications. The PCT system is a very popular method of
filing patent applications throughout the world. There are now
over 125 signatory countries to PCT. The PCT does not provide
for the grant of International Patent. The patent rights are
still a subject matter governed by the local laws of each
country. Under the traditional patent system, individual
application should be filed for each country for which patent
protection was sought. Applicants from members of Paris
convention can claim priority of an earlier application for
application filed subsequently in convention countries.
However, such application has to be filed within 12 months of
the filing date of the application in the home country.
The above method for filing
of patent applications for all countries in which the inventor
wanted to seek protection with respect to as invention within
one year of the filing resulted in huge expenses for
translation, official and attorney fees, all at a time he
doesn’t know whether he is likely to obtain the patent for his
invention. Further, under the traditional system each and
every patent office where an application has been filed, had
to carryout a formal examination of application resulting in
extensive search by each and every office to determine the
patentability of the invention and consequent delay and
expenditure.
The PCT establishes a system
which allows the filing of a single application (international
application) with a single patent Office (receiving office)
having the effect in each of the countries, who are
signatories to the treaty, and which the applicant designates
in his application. The international application must contain
a request, a description, one or more claims, one or more
drawings (if applicable) and an abstract. It must comply with
the prescribed physical requirements for filing applications.
The specification must be in one of the prescribed languages.
Finally, the prescribed fees must be paid.
PCT has two phases, an
international phase when they are international applications
in the International Bureau, and a national phase when they
are converted to national patent applications in the
designated countries of interest. PCT provides formal
examination of the international application by the receiving
Office, and the application is subjected to an international
search which results in an report (International Search
Report) citing the relevant prior art relating to previous
invention which may; have to be taken into account in deciding
whether the invention is patentable, and the said report is
made available to the applicant. The International Bureau (IB)
subsequently publishes the patent specification and also
provides the option of an international preliminary
examination of the international application. A written
opinion containing a report as to whether the claimed
invention meets the criteria for patentability or not may also
be provided to the applicant.
The PCT is divided into two
Chapters, Chapter I and Chapter II. Chapter I requires that
within either 20 or 30 months of the earliest priority date,
(depending on whether or not the country concerned has adopted
the most recent amendments to the PCT Treaty), the applicant
must enter the national phase, that is, file patent
applications in any one or more of the countries initially
designated.
Chapter II allows 30 months
from the earliest priority date for entering the national
phase and also requires a designated International Preliminary
Examining Authority (authorised by WIPO to conduct
international examinations) to conduct a non-binding
substantive examination of the patent specification to
determine whether it meets the requirements for patentability.
It may be noted that, certain designated Offices have fixed
time limits expiring even later than 30 months, or 20 months,
as the case may be. The national phase follows the
international phase. Before processing and examination may
start in the national phase in the designated or elected
Offices, the applicant must perform certain acts thereby
effecting “entry into the national phase.” If the applicant
does not perform these acts within the prescribed time limit,
the international application loses its effect in the
designated or elected States concerned with the same
consequences as the withdrawal of any national application in
that State.
For entry into the national
phase before a designated or elected Office, it is necessary
that the national fee be paid to it and, where the
international application has not been filed or published in
the official language, or one of the official languages, of
that Office, that a translation into an official language be
filed. This must be done within a certain time limit, which is
different depending on the circumstances: if the designated
State concerned has been elected for the purpose of
international preliminary examination within 19 months from
the priority date, the time limit is 30 months from the
priority date; in al other cases (that is, if the designated
State concerned has been elected after 19 months from the
priority date of if the Chapter II procedure has not been used
in relation to that designated State), the time limit is 20
months from the priority date. The time limits for entry into
the national phase are, in some Offices, even longer than 20
or 30 months. Certain additional requirements, such as
appointment of an agent, indication of an address for service
of notifications, declaration of inventor, assignment
documents, and the like, are allowed, but the applicant must
be given the possibility of complying with those additional
requirements after the expiration of the time limits mentioned
above.
The PCT leaves to each
Contracting State freedom to stipulate the substantive
conditions of patentability applied in the national phase.
This is particularly true of what constitutes “prior art”.
However, since the requirements of prior at as defined in the
PCT and its regulations for the purposes of the international
phase are generally as strict as, or stricter than, those
defined in any national law, there is very little likelihood
of unpleasant surprises of this kind occurring in the national
phase. On the other hand, the PCT does not prevent any
national law from requiring the applicant to furnish, in the
national phase, evidence in respect of any substantive
condition of patentability prescribed by that law. The PCT
guarantees the applicant the opportunity to amend the
description, the claims and the drawings before any designated
or elected Office. Thus, in addition to any amendments made in
the international phase, further amendments may be filed upon
entering the national phase or within a prescribed time limit
thereafter.
Where, as a result of a
mistake which was not timely corrected, an international
application is considered withdrawn, the applicant may request
review of that decision by each of the designated Offices. In
addition to requesting review, the applicant has the
opportunity to submit at the same time, to each designated
Office, a request for excuse of failure to comply with a time
limit. The legal basis of, and the conditions for, such a
request are to be found in the applicable national law or
regional convention, which applies equally to international
applications. Where that law or convention provides for
reinstatement, this can be requested. Where there is a
possibility of requesting further processing of the
application, this can also be done. Procedural safeguards are
thus available in each designates State to PCT applicants in
the same way as they are the applicants for national or
regional applications not made via the PCT.
Advantages of PCT System
The advantage of PCT system
is that it allows applicants to file a single patent
application in one country and for up to 30/31 months retain
the option of filing a corresponding application in a large
number of other countries of interest. The PCT system can
therefore be thought of as an extension of time for filing
patent applications world wide at substantially reduced
prosecution costs. Furthermore, one can usually tell from the
International Search Report and Written Opinion, what the
chances are of obtaining patent protection in the other
countries. If there appears to be no prospect of obtaining a
patent, the international application can be abandoned whereby
the applicants lose only the cost of filing a PCT application
instead of a much greater cost of filing applications in every
other countries of interest. Also, the applicants get 18
months more to test the market to determine whether to proceed
with patent applications and indeed to raise capital to fund
the filing of regional/national phase applications.
The traditional system is
still in existence and at the option of the applicant, the
traditional system for the grant of patent rights could still
be adopted.
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