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Claim (patent)

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Patent claims are usually in the form of a series of numbered expressions, or more precisely noun phrases, following the description of the invention in a patent or patent application, and define, in technical terms, the extent of the protection conferred by a patent or by a patent application. They are of the utmost importance both during prosecution and litigation.

For instance, a claim could read:

In order to exclude someone from using a patented invention in a court, the patent owner, or patentee, needs to demonstrate that what the other person is using falls within the scope of a claim of the patent. Therefore, it is more valuable to obtain claims that include the minimal set of limitations that differentiate an invention over what came before, i.e. the so-called prior art. On the other hand, the fewer the limitations in a claim, the more likely it is that the claim will cover or "read on" what came before and be rejected during examination or found to be invalid at a later time for lack of novelty.

History

Patents have not always contained claims. In many European countries, patents did not contain claims before the 1970s. It was then often difficult (and subjective) to decide whether a product infringed a patent, since the sole basis to know the extent of protection was the description, in view of the prior art.

However, even among patent legal systems in which the claims are used as the reference to decide the scope of protection conferred by a patent, the way the claims are used may vary substantially. Traditionally, two types of claiming system exist:

Requirements

Under the European Patent Convention (EPC), a claim must define the matter for which the protection is sought in terms of technical features. These technical features can be either structural (e.g. a nail, a rivet) or functional (e.g. fastening means).

Interpretation

The claims often comprise precise language. Certain words commonly used in claims have specific legal meanings determined by one or more court decisions. These meanings may be different from common usage. For instance, the word "comprise", when used in the claims of a United States patent, means "consisting at least of". By contrast, the word "consists" means "consisting only of", which may lead to a very different scope of protection.

Furthermore, in U.S. patent practice at least, inventors may "act as their own lexicographer" in a patent application. That means that an inventor may give a common word or phrase a meaning that is very specific and different from the normal definition of said word or phrase. Thus a claim must be interpreted in light of the definitions provided in the "specification" of a patent. The "specification" of a patent is a written description of how to make and use the invention (see also: sufficiency of disclosure).

Basic types and categories of claims

There are two basic types of claims:

* Clarification of the independent claim language: Independent claims are typically written with very broad terms, to avoid permitting competitors to circumvent the claim by altering some aspect of the basic design. But when a broad term is used, it may raise a question as to the scope of the term itself. For example, does a "base" include a "set of legs"? A dependent claim, including the phrase, "wherein said base comprisies a set of legs," if allowed by the patent examiner, clarifies that it does.
* Possible invalidity of base claim: It is impossible to know, when beginning the application process and even at the time of patent issuance, if a patent claim is valid. This is because any publication dated a year before the application filing date and published anywhere on earth in any language can invalidate the claim (U.S. practice [but other countries are even stricter]). As it is impossible to gain an absolute and complete knowledge of every publication on earth, there is always some uncertainty. If the independent claim is determined to be invalid, however, a dependent claim may nevertheless survive, and may still be broad enough to bar competitors from valuable commercial territory.
When a claim in one particular category (see below), e.g. a process claim, depends on a claim from a different category, e.g. a product claim, it is not considered to be a dependent claim but an independent claim (at least under the European Patent Convention).

Claims can also be classified in categories, i.e. in terms of what they claim. A claim can refer to

Special types of claims

Jepson claim

In United States patent law, a Jepson claim is a method or product claim where one or more limitations are specifically identified as a point of novelty, distinguishable over at least the contents of the preamble. They may read for instance "A system for storing information having (...) wherein the improvement comprises:".

In U.S. practice, during prosecution a USPTO patent examiner may cite the contents of the preamble as "Applicant Admitted Prior Art" to assemble a 35 U.S.C. 103(a) obviousness rejection of the Jepson claim, and possibly as "Applicant Admitted Prior Art" to assemble a 35 U.S.C. 103(a) obviousness rejection of other independent and dependent claims within the prosecuted claims.

In a crowded art, a Jepson claim can be useful in calling the Examiner's attention to a point of novelty of an invention without requiring the Applicant to present arguments and possibly amendments to communicate the point of novelty to the Examiner. Such arguments and amendments can be damaging in future litigation, for example as outlined in the Festo decision.

This claim’s name is based on a case, Ex parte Jepson, which was ruled on in 1917.

Markush claim

Mainly used in chemistry, a Markush claim or structure is a claim with multiple "functionally equivalent" chemical entities allowed in one or more parts of the compound. According to "Patent Law for the Nonlawyer" (Burton A. Amernick; 2nd edition, 1991),

"In claims that recite... components of compositions, it is sometimes important to claim, as alternatives, a group of constituents that are considered equivalent for the purposes of the invention.... It has been permissible to claim such an artificial group, referred to as a 'Markush Group,' ever since the inventor in the first case... won the right to do so."
If a compound being patented includes several Markush groups, the number of possible compounds it covers could be vast. No patent databases generate all possible permutations and index them separately. Patent searchers have the problem, when searching for specific chemicals in patents, of trying to find all patents with Markush structures that would include their chemicals, even though these patents' indexing would not include the suitable specific compounds. This is where databases that permit searching of chemical substructures are indispensable.

Markush claims were named after Eugene Markush, the first inventor to use them successfully in a U.S. patent, in the 1920s.

Means-plus-function claim

A means-plus-function claim is a claim including a technical feature expressed in functional terms of the type "means for converting a digital electric signal into an analog electric signal".

Omnibus claim

A so-called omnibus claim is a claim including a reference to the description or the drawings without stating explicitly any technical features of the product or process claimed. For instance, they may read as "Apparatus as described in the description" or "An x as shown in Figure y".

Omnibus claims are not allowed under the EPC "except when they are absolutely necessary" [link] [link], but are acceptable at some offices, such as the United Kingdom Patent Office.

Product-by-process claim

A product-by-process claim is a product claim where the product is defined by its process of manufacture, especially in the chemical and pharmaceutical industries. They may read for instance "Product obtained by the process of claim ...".

According to the European practice, they should be interpreted as meaning "Product obtainable by the process of claim...". They are only allowable if the product is patentable as such, and if the product cannot be defined in a sufficient manner on its own, i.e. with reference to its composition, structure or other testable parameters, and thus without any reference to the process.

The protection conferred by product-by-process claims should not be confused with the protection conferred to products by pure process claims, when the products are directly obtained by the claimed process of manufacture ().

Swiss-type claim

A Swiss-type claim or "Swiss type of use claim" is a claim intended to cover the second or subsequent medical use (or indication) of a known substance or composition.

Consider a chemical compound which is known generally, and also is known to have a medical use (e.g. treating headaches). If it is then found to have a second medical use (such as restoring hair loss), the discoverer of this property will want to protect this new use by obtaining a patent for this new use.

However, the substance itself is known and cannot be patented. It lacks novelty under . Nor can the general concept of a medical formulation including this compound. This is known from the first medical use, and thus also lacks novelty under . Only the method of treatment is new. However methods for treatment of the human body by therapy are not regarded as inventions which are susceptible of industrial application under European law (e.g. ) and are not patentable.

The Enlarged Board of Appeal of the European Patent Office solved this by allowing claims to protect the "use of substance X in the manufacture of a medicament for the treatment of condition Y" (G 5/83 [link]). This fulfilled the letter of the law (it claimed the manufacture, not the medical treatment), and satisfied the pharmaceutical industry also.

Because such claims had first been allowed in Switzerland they became known as "Swiss-type claims".

Other types

References

See also

External links

 


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