What is required to obtain actual and not estimated costs in a Patent Opposition?

November 20, 2011

Oval Magofim LTD, represented by Mati Barzam, successfully opposed Israel patent application No. 165760 to Alberto Lodolo.

After requesting and receiving one extension to file a response and counter-claims, the applicant filed for a second extension and was refused, and the application was thus dismissed.

The opposer filed for costs, and claimed NIS 50,000, arguing that the legal costs incurred were NIS 35,763.60, to which should be added a further NIS 15,000 for direct costs to the opposer who had to use their own staff to prepare evidence for the Statement of Case.

The lawyer’s invoices were appended to the request for costs, as was an affidavit from the CEO of the opposer who claimed that he or another worker had spent 100 hours in getting material together and in reviewing the opposition statement.

In ruling, Ms Y. Shoshani Caspi considered lawyer’s invoices labeled ‘for patent work’ insufficiently detailed to be clearly linked to this specific case and to explain how the sums reached were justified. Furthermore, the affidavit was also considered insufficiently detailed. One specific point Ms Y. Shoshani Caspi queried was that the CEO detailed reviewing the statement of case. Ms Y. Shoshani Caspi considered this as an additional safeguard but not strictly neccessary. She rejected the actual costs and estimated that NIS 15,000 were appropriate for the amount of work performed.

Costs in opposition to IL 165760 to Alberto Lodolo, opposed by Oval Magofim LTD., 19 September 2011.

COMMENT

Without seeing how much material was filed, it is difficult to estimate how much work went into it, but at a reasonable  IP lawyer’s rate of NIS 1000 an hour, one can assume that the cost of filing an opposition, which requires analyzing the application, reviewing prior art and writing an opposition will take time.

I suspect that the patent office simply weighs the material submitted, and am not sure that the estimated costs are fairer than the requested costs.  That said, the patent office is in the best position to directly compare different cases.

 


Israel Commissioner Meets Representatives of the Professional Organizations

October 27, 2011

Following a practice initiated by his predecessor, Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks, Assa Kling, met with representatives of the Israel Association of Patent Attorneys, the Israel Branch of the AIPPI, the IP group of the Israel Bar, the Licensing Executive Society (LES) and the International Federation of Intellectual Property Attorneys (FICPI) in a round table discussion.

Several issues were dealt with and minutes of the meeting  were made available by Adv. Tal Band, the head of the AIPPI. This reprot is based on those minutes.

Appropriately, the tragic and sudden loss  of the Head of the Trademark Department, the late Ms Nurit Maoz was the first issue raised. Her achievements were acknowledged and patience was requested from the profession for the invitable delays that have and will occur until the department is able to reorganize itself and move forward.

I discovered that the Israel Association of Patent Attorneys is no longer headed by Ms Michal Hackmey alone, but now has a co-chairperson, Ronny Shutrut. Despite being a member of good standing in the organization, I didn’t hear about this decision from the organization itself. His appointment doesn’t seem to have been an election. At the last general election, several of the large firms voted on behalf of all workers by proxy, despite there being nothing in the constitution to allow this, and despite those voting in absentia not knowing who would be standing for office. There was, however, a facade of democracy. this appointment seems to have been made without even directly informing the members, which is less than satisfactory.

Another unsatisfactory aspect of this is that both co-chairpeople work for the same firm. Funnily enough, the chairperson of the FICPI (Ina Pugasch) is a further employee of the Reinhold Cohn IP group.

We assume that RCIP, as Israel’s largest IP practice (excluding the patent office and TEVA) is big enough to take care of its interests. Since the Commissioner himself, worked there until his appointment earlier this year, I suspect that the firm is reasonably capable of getting his ear if necessary.

The question is whether the present set up serves the interests of practitioners not working for RCIP, including the very large number of sole-practitioners whose needs and perhaps that of their client base may be very different to that of the Reinhold Cohen group.

Ms Michal Hackmey did request that members submit issues to her, for raising at these important meetings. Unfortunately, however, her priorities in deciding which issues to raise, will invariably reflect her perspective and practice.  I raised two issues with her and asked them to be brought up. I requested that the current practice of examination of independent claims only be raised as it extends prosecution and incurs unneccessary expense to clients. I also raised the issue of apparent illegality of the committees that orally examine candidate patent attorneys.  The first issue was apparently not raised but the second issue was discussed, but after the furore raised in responses to this blog and the like, presumably could not be ignored.

If all the people representing the private sector at these round tables come from 2 or 3 large firms, does this promote the interests of the profession as a whole? Not sure.  We wonder, therefore, whether the roundtable really serves its purpose to provide a channel of communication between the profession (as a whole), and the Patent Office.

One interesting insight was that the Commissioner of Patents noted that various issues including amending the law regarding examining patent attorneys was not within his bailiwick and he had no authority in such matters. We note that this more humble approach contrasts to that taken by his predecessor, who sometimes exceeded his authority when trying to straighten out archaic practices. Substantively, if not formally, Dr Noam’s reforms were generally both correct and filled needs, despite the rap he took from the Knesset committee for exceeding his authority and ignoring the letter of the law.

It seems from the sentiments reported in the summary of this first round table, that Commissioner Kling will be conservative in how he pursues his reforms.


Mylan and Sandoz Claim that their Generic Versions of Copaxone do not Infringe Teva’s Patents

September 8, 2011

Sometimes Israel’s Teva is wrongly considered as being only a generic drug player.

One of their patented pharmaceuticals is Copaxone, and Teva have filed suit against four companies – Novartis’ Sandoz unit, Mylan, Momenta Pharmaceuticals and India’s Natco Pharma – alleging infringement of patents for best-selling drug Copaxone.

The generics firms claim that Teva’s patent for Copaxone (glatiramer acetate) are invalid.

The US District Court for the Southern District of New York refused to issue a summary judgment in the case, requiring a trial to take place.

Meanwhile, some analysts suggest that the outcome of the court case could be unimportant because there are serious questions about the ability of the generics companies to prove that their products are equivalent to the branded Copaxone. Bioequivalence is difficult in this instance since Copaxone is a complicated molecule, with a poorly understood mechanism of action and no validated biomarkers for its efficacy.

In this regard, we note that Teva has repeatedly asked the US Food and Drug Administration (the FDA) to refuse to approve any abbreviated New Drug Application for a “purported generic version” of Copaxone, given the “inability to establish acceptable ‘sameness’ of the active ingredients” in the drug. To date, all the petitions have been rejected.

Consequently, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) may require a fairly extensive clinical trials programme for any generic version and the patent will anyway lapse in 2014.

A verdict in the case is not expected for several months.


Maybe Oral Exams for Israel Patent Attorneys Should be Scrapped?

July 31, 2011

After a two-year internship working for a licensed Israel Patent Attorney, a trainee patent attorney in Israel must take a written exam that tests patent drafting skills and an oral exam before a panel of three. The oral exam is supposed to test knowledge of IP Law.

The Exams are held twice a year and there is generally a high failure rate in the oral exam. Failing once or twice due to nerves or lack of preparation is reasonable, but there seems to be a large number of candidates that seem to keep failing.

For the past couple of years I’ve been getting a crop of thank-yous from successful candidates that have found this blog helpful in reviewing the case-law.  I also hear complaints from unsuccessful candidates who feel the system is unfair.

A candidate who knows all the black letter law, the regulations, the Patent Office circulars, the major decisions and recent case-law for patents, plant-patents, trademarks, designs and copyright and who has a fair understanding of US, European and Far East patent law, should get through without any difficulty.

The problem is that hesitating or not knowing some fairly archaic or obscure regulation can result in failure. The system lacks transparency. Different candidates are asked different questions. Firms sending more than one candidate are sometimes surprised by who passes and who fails. As there is no record, there is no appeal.

Because of the close-knit nature of the profession, it frequently happens that a candidate has worked for one or other of the judging panel and a change in judges is required. Different judges will react differently. There appears to be some subjectivity in the procedure.

I note that in the US and in Europe, candidates sit written theory exams. With written exams, particularly short-answers or multiple choice type questions, candidates can be tested more thoroughly on more material. This is how attorneys-at-law are examined.

One could have clear requirements for passing, such as, say, 80% correct answers.

Such a system would be fairer and remove much of the complaints – whether justified or not – from candidates who feel hard done by.


Israel Patent Office Publishes Report on 2010 Activity

July 29, 2011

The Israel Patent Office has just published a report covering its activity in 2010.

The report, in Hebrew, is available from here: http://www.justice.gov.il/NR/rdonlyres/C6ACFC67-FFF0-4D16-A8C3-DCFD0154D82E/0/2010.pdf

There are 45 pages of statistical data that contains few surprises, bound in a blue cover with a slightly corny lightbulb image.

Much of the comparative material, showing how the IPO compares with patent offices in other jurisdictions, and the number of patents filed per GDP and per population are found in the OECD report, on WIPO’s website, and in a paper I wrote together with Jeremy Ben David and which was published in WIPR a couple of months ago. Nevertheless, the report is comprehensive and compares favorably to the odd table or graph that the patent office has traditionally published.

There is some data on oppositions that has never been presented before and also comprehensive ranking tables showing where incoming filings originate.

The document carries two introductions, one from newly installed commissioner, Adv. Asa Kling, and one from his predecessor Dr Meir Noam. We weren’t surprised to see that each commissioner has lauded his predecessor / successor. However, since the document relates to the end of Dr Noam’s tenure, and before Adv. Kling took over as commissioner, this seems appropriate, if a little tiresome. Actually to be fair, 2010 was a good year for Dr Noam, whose achievements were many.

Of note, there is apparently on going consultation between the patent office and the Ministry of Justice regarding a Design Law to replace the 1924 Ordinance inherited from the British mandate, which is still in force.

We were surprised to learn that Brazil is a major filer or design registrations in Israel. Indeed 109 of the 423 design registrations originating from abroad came from Brazil, ahead of everywhere else including the US. Apparently, this is due almost exclusively to H Stern, a Brazilian jewelry firm with many outlets in Israel. Apart from jewelry, Israel design registrations were filed mostly for clothing, building materials, ornaments and food containers. In total, 1622 design applications were filed, which is, however, less than in any of the years 2005-2009.

There were a total of 8017 trademark applications filed into Israel in 2010, which is less than any of the years 2005-2009 and nearly 2500 less than 2008.

Protocol Madrid for the multi-national registration of trademarks came into force in Israel in September 2010, and in the last quarter of the year, some 463 filings were made into Israel via the protocol, and 37 international applications originating in Israel were filed.

In total, some 7266 patent applications were filed in Israel in 2010, which is up from 6780 in 2009, but still below the 2006-2008 levels which peaked, in 20o7, at 8064.  Most of these applications were Paris/PCT filings or divisional applications, claiming priority from earlier applications. The number of new applications first filed in Israel was 1044, which is the smallest number for a decade. It seems that more and more Israeli applicants are first filing in the US, either as regular applications, or are filing US provisional applications.

There was a lot of patents examined and allowed, but problems in publication delayed them issuing and probably contributed to the low number of oppositions filed, which, at 22, is up from 2009 when only 20 were filed, and from 2001 when 21 were filed, but much lower than the other years of this millennium.  We suspect however, that a number of cases examined in 2010 only published in 2011 and there will be some additional oppositions (indeed, I am handling one such case together with Adv Lewin from our office).

Some 41% of patent filings into Israel are computer/electronics related. 31% are chemistry (mostly pharmaceuticals), 17% biotech and 11% mechanical or telecommunications related. (I am not sure why telecommunications is related to mechanical and not to computer/electronics. I suspect it is an anomaly dating back to the mechanical telegraph or to the telephone made of two cups connected by a taut string). The Israel Patent Office receives a disproportionate amount of high-tech and pharmaceutical patent filings compared to those in traditional industries. This seems to reflect the fields where Israeli industries are perceived by competitors as being a threat.

In the end of 2009, Dr Noam initiated a fast track for ‘green’ patent applications. Some 22 attempts to have applications recognized as green were made during the year, and of these, 16 were accepted for the fast track, and 6 were refused. In the pie-chart summarizing this information, the 262 degree slice was coloured green, and the remaining 98 degrees was coloured orange. The significance of this colour was not apparent.Israel is a noticeable user of the PCT system in absolute terms, and is the largest user in terms of population. I suspect that this is because of the small local market, and Israel’s favorable trade relations with the US, Europe and the far East.

It seems that IP activity in Israel, both from local entities and from foreign applicants was down in 2010 in patents, designs and trademarks. This does not come as a surprise,  as we’ve felt the drop in work. It is little comfort to know that Israel weathered the recession better than many other economies, and that patent, design and trademark filings are down everywhere, except for China.

However, we note that the patent office has been aggressively attacking backlogs and examination pendencies are down as well.

We hope that the 2011 data will be more positive!


Opposition Withdrawn but Israel Patent Office Refuses Patent Anyway

June 9, 2011

Lilly Icos LLC applied for Israel Patent Number 147642, a national phase of WO/2001/008688) BETA-CARBOLINE DRUG PRODUCTS. The patent application concerns Tadalafil, a treatment for male impotence due to erectile dysfunction which is marketed as Cialis.

After allowance, the patent application published for opposition purposes and Teva filed an opposition claiming that the invention was essentially using smaller particles as a technique for improving the rate of solubility of the drug and was therefore obvious.

Eventually the sides overcame their differences and the opposition was withdrawn. However, using his authority under Section 34 of the Israel Patent Law, Deputy Commissioner Noach Shalev Shlomovits defended the public interest and refused the patent, ruling that the technique of reducing particle size as a means of increasing rate of solubility lacked any inventive step.

As he was terminating his contract, and in accordance with Ordinance 74 and Section 159, the Deputy Commissioner gave the parties 30 days to file any appeals so he would be able to close the file himself rather than having his replacement learn the material. 

COMMENT

Solubility is a surface effect. Since the amount of surface area for a given weight of material increases as particle size decreases, it is clear that shrinking particle size will increase rate of solution.  It seems, therefore, that the Deputy Commissioner is correct.


Service Inventions – Report of a Hearing Behind Closed Doors

June 9, 2011

The Israel Patent Office has published a highly censored report of a hearing concerning Invention No. XXX, filed on 29 November 2004 filed by a Mr Ronen Harel (Hamami). Mr Harel was a bomb disposal expert (sapper) working for the police bomb disposal group and the Israel Police and the State of Israel claim that the invention is a service Invention owned by them as his employer. 

Where an invention is considered of national security, filing abroad is prohibited and the application is kept secret. There is, however, a committee that decides on compensation to the patent owner. The first question, therefore, is who is the owner of the patent? A second issue is whether compensation is due.

The legal question is whether the invention is a Service Invention under Section 132 of the Israel Patent Act 1967. The Commissioner of Patents has the authority under Section 133 of the Patent Law to decide this issue if the parties appeal to him. There is a royalties committee that decides on appropriate compensation for Service Inventions.

In addition to relating to the issue of employer – employee inventions and the ownership of patents developed by State employees, the particular development in question apparently relates to bomb defusing and has security ramifications and so the hearing was carried out behind closed doors and the ruling has the frustrating characteristic of having the juicy bits blacked out. The invention certainly has something to do with explosives but it is unclear exactly what and how it works. 

Thus we learn that in or around 1995 – 1996, the Inventor started working in the XXX facility on development of innovations.

A particularly informative sentence goes like this:

The title of the invention is “XXX”. There is no disagreement that the invention relates to explosives and specifically to “XXX”.

Although the State acknowledges that the Law provides compensation to inventors of State Inventions, the interpretation of the case-law is not overly generous to the inventors and the State also argues that such inventions are generally the result of team effort.

The inventor claimed to have developed the invention on his back veranda in 1996 and that for the first time the innovative development allows XXX (frustrating isn’t it?)

Supported by his immediate superior, the inventor claimed to be the initiator of the development and that after he filed the application himself, the onus was on the State

What is interesting about the case is that the arguments raised are exactly those raised abroad regarding academic inventions. The inventor claims that his job was not to invent, that he developed the invention at home on his balcony, that the onus is on the employer to prove that he was contractually required to transfer all inventions, that he’s developed the idea with his private money, that his job description didn’t include inventing. The State argued that the inventor turning to private contractors was a criminal act, and that policemen and security personnel were defined as such also when off duty. They brought various deputy commissioners and chief inspectors to testify as to the norms in the unit and showed that the field officers were trained in the theory and consulted with regards to developments and were encouraged to innovate.  

The Commissioner of Patents asserted that the officer did take work home and did routine paperwork on his home computer, thereby rendering the fact that the invention was apparently developed at home, not decisive. The various procedures of the unit made it clear that development was part of the job.

The commissioner ruled that the invention was to be considered a service invention and State property. In view of the effectively unlimited resources of the State to fight such actions, he limited the costs awarded to NIS12,000 (about $3500 US). The decision has been referred to the committee that handles royalty and compensation issues.

The decision, was published recently in May, but dated 8 December 2010. I assume that the ruling was referred back to the Ministry of Defence for censorship before publication and this resulted in the 6 month publication delay.

I hope that the invention is implemented and saves lives.


Is Smith Kline Beecham’s Patent for Rosiglitazone Maleate (Avendia) Invalidated by an Earlier Patent Claiming Rosiglitazone and its Salts?

June 6, 2011

Rosiglitazone Maleate is a patented drug that is manufactured by Smith Kline Beecham (SKB) under the trade name Avendia and is used for the treatment of type II Diabetes.

When Israel drug manufacturers Unipharm and Trima started manufacturing generic versions, SKB filed for an injunction and also for damages. Unipharm and Trima’s defense was that the patent in question, IL 106904, which claims priority from an earlier British application UK 9218830/9 is invalid, since it lacks novelty and inventive step in light of an earlier European patent EP 0306228 that published before the priority date.

The Court of First Instance found that the generic product, Rosi, produced by Unipharm and Trima infringed the IL 106904 patent, which was upheld over the prior patent. Lack of sales rendered the issue of unfair trade and compensation of the patentee for lack of sales moot. The decision was appealed to the Israel Supreme Court.

In the Appeal, Unipharm and Trima claimed that the Court of First Instance was wrong to determine that since there was novelty and inventive step, the issue of whether the patent in question was a selection patent did not need addressing. They argued that although a preferred salt had been isolated, it could not fairly be used to extend the term of protection beyond the expiry date of the earlier patent. They also argued lack of enablement. Finally, they pointed out that although advantages were claimed, this was in a qualitative and not a quantitive manner.

The court reminded the parties that it does not review factual determinations of the Court of First Instance, but only reviews matters of law. It went on to rule that even were the wide claim 1 to be invalidated, nevertheless Claim 4 for the specific Rosiglitazone Maleate could survive on its own merits if shown to be novel and inventive as it was widely supported by the specification. They also defended the principle of At Risk manufacture, pointing out that the Law (Section 182) allows invalidity as a defense for patent infringement.

The Court of First Instance was impressed by the patentee’s witnesses and by the fact that the defendants witness admitted that Rosiglitazone Maleate was novel. The fact that the patentee could show trial and error in the research program, that they considered other salts like the hydrochloride more likely to be appropriate and almost gave up the project for lack of progress as indicative that the selected sale is not obvious. The Court of Appeal saw no reason to overturn this ruling. Pointing out that the Israel Patent Law for Novelty requires enabling disclosure, the court pointed out that nowhere is Rosiglitazone Maleate mentioned in the earlier patent, and so was novel there over. By virtue of the earlier patent teaching basic salts and the present invention being an acidic salt, in view of improved efficacy, higher solubility and stability, the Rosiglitazone Maleate was considered novel and inventive. As to enablement, the court pointed out that the ease of copying of the patented salt by the man of the art, on the basis of the disclosure in the patent is evidence that the description is enabling.

Costs of NIS 60,000 were awarded to the patentee.

The Case: Appeal 8802/06 Unipharm et al. vs. Smith Kline Beecham et al. given on 18 May 2011 by Retired Judge Fructzia an endorsed by Judge Heyot and Judge Fogelman.

Comments

This decision is notable as it is rare that Adi Levit, representing Unipharm, loses to the innovative drug industry represented by Richard Luthie.

There are a number of points of interest. Appellants claimed that the Rosiglitazone Maleate was claimed in a dependent claim (claim 4) and if the main claim falls, this dependent claim falls with it. Such an argument is found in a couple of decisions of the outgoing Arbitrator of Intellectual Property at the Patent Office, Noach Shalev Shlomovich. In Giraffa vs. Melnicke, Shlomovitch rules that where a main claim is invalid, all dependent claims also fall. I criticized that fiercely and he admitted to me once that this was a mistake. Nevertheless, in other oppositions, where main claims are shown to be invalid, he has punished the applicant for greed and cancelled the dependent claims. In this case, the Supreme Court has ruled that where there is adequate support for the dependent claim and that it is fairly based on the specification, it survives even if the independent claim on which it is based is invalidated. It is hoped that this Supreme Court ruling is considered as binding precedent and this odd issue is laid to rest.

The claims of the prior art do relate to salts of rosiglitazone which does literally include Rosiglitazone Maleate. Since the specification relates to basic salts only the court has effectively construed the term ‘rosiglitazone and its pharmaceutical acceptable salts’ to mean basic salts only. Frankly I am not sure that this is needed. If some specific molecule is indeed surprisingly found to have advantages over the prior art, this could fairly be patentable. When the main patent expires, other salts, not within the scope of the second patent will become public domain.

As is often the case, it is the obiter that is most interesting. In this case, the court has essentially rejected selection patents as a separate class, arguing that previous Supreme Court rulings related to the mandatory regime before the Israel Patent Law was passed and that by not relating to selection patents, the Israel Law has essentially rejected them as a class. Another interesting point made is that secondary uses of known pharmaceuticals are patentable inventions. In the past, the title of an Israel patent has been considered unimportant, and it is generally considered as used for classification purposes only. In this ruling it is clear that the courts do consider the title as indicative of the scope of the invention. Reiterating Section 49 the court has ruled that it considers that the scope of the patent includes its nucleus (pith and marrow?) and the exact wording of the claims is not all-important. It seems that unnecessary limitations in the claim language will not be considered limiting of the scope of the monopoly.

 


Patent for Hydrated Salt of Risedronate Refused in Israel Opposition

May 4, 2011

Risedronate is used for the treatment of Paget’s disease of bone, a disease in which the formation of bone is abnormal, and for treating sufferers of osteoporosis in which the density and strength of bones are reduced. By slowing down the rate at which bone is dissolved, risedronate increases the amount of bone. The FDA approved risedronate for treatment of Paget’s disease in 1998 and for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis in 1999. The drug is marketed as Actonel.

Proctor & Gamble filed worldwide patents titled for WO/2001/056983 ”Selective Crystallization of 3-Pyridyl-1-Hydroxyethylidene-1,1-Bisphosphonic Acid Sodium as the Hemipentahydrate or Monohydrate.” This patent has issued in Korea, Europe and the US. After allowance in Israel, it published for Opposition purposes and Unipharm filed an opposition. The claims in Israel were those allowed in the US.

The main claim is:

A process for selectively producing 3-pyridyl-1-hydroxyethlidene-1,1-bisphosphonic acid sodium hemipentahydrate and monohydrate comprising the steps of:

a) providing an aqueous solution of 3-pyridyl-1-hydroxyethlidene-1,1-bisphosphonic acid sodium;

 b) heating the aqueous solution to a temperature from about 45° C. to about 75° C.; c) adding a solvent to the aqueous solution; and

 d) optionally cooling the aqueous solution.

The Opposer claimed that the applicant knew full well that the hydrated salt was a mixture of the hemipentahydrate and the monohydrate and that the method of crystallization was the standard method of dissolution and was totally lacking in inventive step. The Applicant claimed not to have been aware of the monohydrate, although it is apparently always precipitated with the hemipentahydrate.

Deputy Commissioner Noach Shalev Shlomovits who heard the opposition, was apparently impressed by the fact that neither in the application nor during the opposition proceedings, did the applicant produce any crystallographical evidence, but simply deduced the two salts from the weight of the crystals, estimating the water of crystallization. Without any other evidence, it is clear that both crystal forms must have been known, and it appears that the general observation of controlling the rate of cooling and concentrations does not involve an inventive step. Shlomovits ruled that not only was there a lack of inventive step, but that the application was not properly enabled. Furthermore, he states that the claimed invention is not fairly based on the specification. Additionally, for greediness in clearly claiming more than is entitled, the Deputy Commissioner ruled that the application should be rejected. Finally, he stated that the scope of the composition claims include the pure hemipentahydrate which the applicant accepted was previously known since it was claimed in an earlier application.

Comments

The decision is resplendent with words like obvious’ and clearly, yet it should be noted that other, significant examining jurisdictions did allow the patent. Nevertheless, claims 16 to 18 relate to mixtures of from 50%-100% hemipentahydrate which does indeed lack novelty due to previous patents for the salt. Is this an attempt at ever-greening? Perhaps. If the applicant is dissatisfied with the Deputy Commissioner’s analysis, this decision will be appealed to the courts.

It should be noted that Teva tried unsuccessfully to invalidate the main Actonel patent in 2008. Earlier this year Teva was sued by Roche and by Warner Chilcott for patent infringement when trying to obtain FDA approval for a generic version of the drug.


Israel Patent Office Closed for Pesach

April 18, 2011

The Israel Patent Office is closed for Pesach. It will reopen on 29th April 2011. All deadlines in the interim are postponed until it reopens.

Israeli applicants wishing to file a PCT application with the Israel Patent Office after Pesach, claiming priority from a US provisional application, with a due date whilst the Israel Patent Office is closed should be aware that in such circumstances, the USPTO will not recognize priority from the provisional application.

In such circumstances, it is advisable to file in the US under the Paris Convention or to file the PCT in Geneva within 12 months of priority.

Wishing all our readers a Happy Pesach or Easter as applicable.


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