DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
  Patent and Trademark Office
  37 CFR Parts 1 and 3
  
  [Docket No. 941120-4320]
  
  RIN:  0651-AA76 
  
  Changes to Implement 20-Year Patent Term and Provisional
  Applications
  
  AGENCY:  Patent and Trademark Office, Commerce.
  
  ACTION:  Notice of proposed rulemaking.
  
  SUMMARY:  The Patent and Trademark Office (Office) is
  proposing to amend the rules of practice in patent cases to
  implement the changes related to patent term in title 35,
  United State Code, contained in the Uruguay Round Agreements
  Act (S. 2467 and H.R. 5110), which was recently passed by
  Congress, and to simplify the rules.  Among the changes that
  are contained in S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 are the conversion to
  a 20-year patent term measured from the date of filing an
  application in the U.S., and the introduction of provisional
  applications.  The changes apply to utility and plant
  patents.  They do not apply to design patents.  S. 2467 was
  passed by the Senate on December 1, 1994, and the House
  passed H.R. 5110 on November 29, 1994.  The President has
  indicated that he will sign the bills.  Since a Public Law
  number is not available, the rule package refers to the
  Senate and House bill numbers for convenience.  The
  amendments to title 35 relating to 20-year patent term and
  provisional applications will be effective on the date which
  is 6 months after the date of enactment.
  
  DATES:  Written comments must be submitted on or before
  February 17, 1995.  A public hearing will be held Thursday,
  February 16, 1995, at 9:30 a.m., in the Commissioner's
  Conference Room 912, Crystal Park 2, 2121 Crystal Drive,
  Arlington, Virginia.  Requests to present oral testimony
  should be received on or before February 14, 1995. 
  
  ADDRESSES:  Address written comments and requests to present
  oral testimony to the Commissioner of Patents and
  Trademarks, Washington, D.C. 20231, Attention:  Stephen G.
  Kunin, Deputy Assistant Commissioner for Patent Policy and
  Projects, Crystal Park 2, Suite 919, or by fax to
  (703)305-8825.
   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:  Magdalen Y. Greenlief or
  John F. Gonzales, Special Program Examiners, Office of the
  Deputy Assistant Commissioner for Patent Policy and
  Projects, at (703)305-9285 or by mail marked to their
  attention and addressed to the Commissioner of Patents and
  Trademarks, Washington, D.C. 20231.
  
  SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:  This proposed rule change is
  designed primarily to implement the changes in practice
  related to patent term provided for in S. 2467 and
  H.R. 5110.  In addition, it is proposed to simplify the
  procedures for filing continuation and divisional
  applications which will benefit both the Office and the
  public.
  
  Section 154 of title 35, United State Code, currently
  provides that every patent (other than a design patent)
  shall be granted for a term of seventeen years from the
  patent issue date, subject to the payment of maintenance
  fees as provided for in title 35.  S. 2467 and H.R. 5110
  amend 35 U.S.C. 154 by establishing a 20-year patent term
  from the date of filing of the application.  Specifically,
  the legislation provides that the patent term will begin on
  the date on which the patent issues and will end twenty
  years from the date on which the application was filed in
  the United States.  If the application contains a specific
  reference to an earlier application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121
  or 365(c), the patent term will end twenty years from the
  date on which the earliest application relied on was filed.
  As amended by S. 2467 and H.R. 5110, 35 U.S.C. 154 excludes
  from determination of the patent term any application on
  which priority is claimed under 35 U.S.C. 119, 365(a) or
  365(b).
  
  S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 further provide that the term of a
  patent may be extended, for a maximum of five years, where
  the issuance of a patent is delayed because of
  (1) proceedings under 35 U.S.C. 135(a), (2) placement of the
  application under a secrecy order pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 181,
  and/or, under certain circumstances, (3) appellate review by
  the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences or by a
  federal court.  The total extension available is limited to
  five years regardless of whether there were delays due to
  more than one of the reasons covered by the legislation.
  This extension is separate from and in addition to the
  patent term extension available under 35 U.S.C. 156.
  
  In addition, S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 establish a domestic
  priority system.  In accordance with the provisions of the
  Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property,
  the term of a patent cannot include the Paris Convention
  priority period.  The  legislation provides a mechanism to
  enable domestic applicants to quickly and inexpensively file
  provisional applications.  Applicants will be entitled to
  claim the benefit of priority in a given application based
  upon the previously filed provisional application in the
  United States.  The domestic priority period will not count
  in the measurement of the term.  Thus, under the
  legislation, domestic applicants will be placed on an equal
  footing with foreign applicants with respect to the patent
  term.
  
  35 U.S.C. 111 is amended by S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 to provide
  for the filing of a provisional application. 
  35 U.S.C. 41(a)(1) is amended to provide a $150.00 filing
  fee for each provisional application, subject to a
  50 percent reduction for a small entity.  The requirements
  for obtaining a filing date for a provisional application
  are the same as those which previously existed for an
  application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111, except that no claim
  or claims as set forth in 35 U.S.C. 112, second paragraph,
  is required.  Moreover, no oath/declaration as set forth in
  35 U.S.C. 115 is required.  The provisional application is
  also not subject to the provisions of 35 U.S.C. 131, 135 and
  157, i.e., a provisional application will not be examined
  for patentability, placed in interference or made the
  subject of a statutory invention registration.  Further, the
  provisional application will automatically be abandoned
  twelve (12) months after its filing date and will not be
  subject to revival to restore it to pending status
  thereafter.  Benefit of the filing date of the copending
  provisional application may be claimed pursuant to
  35 U.S.C. 119(e), as contained in S. 2467 and H.R. 5110, in
  a continuing application during these 12 months.  A
  provisional application will not be entitled to claim
  priority benefits based on any other application under
  35 U.S.C. 119, 120, 121 or 365.
  
  Also, S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 amend 35 U.S.C. 119 to allow an
  applicant to claim benefits of the filing date of the
  provisional application in a later filed U.S. application.
  However, since 35 U.S.C. 154 excludes from the determination
  of the patent term any application on which priority is
  claimed under 35 U.S.C. 119, 365(a) or 365(b), the filing
  date of a provisional application will not be considered in
  determining the term of any patent.
  
  S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 further include transitional
  provisions for limited reexamination in certain applications
  pending for 2 years or longer as of the effective date of
  35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2), taking into account any reference to
  any earlier application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c).
  The transitional provisions also permit examination of more
  than one independent and distinct invention in certain 
  applications pending for 3 years or longer as of the
  effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2), taking into account
  any reference to any earlier application under
  35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c).  These transitional provisions
  are not applicable to any application which is filed on or
  after the effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2), regardless
  of whether the application is a continuing application.
  
  In addition, this proposed rule change will simplify the
  procedures by eliminating the processing and retention fee
  practice set forth in existing sections 1.53(d) and
  1.78(a)(1).  The processing and retention fee practice
  allows applicants to file an application without the filing
  fee and to pay the processing and retention fee of $130.00
  in order for the application to be used as a basis for
  foreign filing and for priority under 35 U.S.C. 120.  The
  processing and retention fee practice is seldom used and
  will be unnecessary in view of the legislation which
  provides for the filing of a provisional application with a
  filing fee of $150.00/$75.00.  The result achieved by the
  use of the processing and retention fee practice can be
  achieved by the use of the provisional application practice
  at about the same fee level.
  
  In order to simplify the procedures for filing continuation
  and divisional applications, it is proposed that
  section 1.60 be deleted.  The procedures set forth
  in section 1.60 are unnecessary in view of the recent rule
  change to section 1.6(d) which permits the filing of a copy
  of an oath or declaration.  Applicants may use the
  procedures set forth in section 1.53 to file a continuation
  or divisional application under 35 U.S.C. 111(a), as
  contained in S. 2467 and H.R. 5110, by providing the Office
  with a copy of the prior application as filed.  The issue of
  a stale oath or declaration would be eliminated by amending
  Office practice since neither the statute nor the rules
  require a recent date of execution to appear on the oath or
  declaration.  The subject matter of the application would
  have been executed by the inventor(s) and the duty of candor
  and good faith including the duty of disclosure requirements
  of section 1.56 would be continuous and would apply to the
  continuing application.
  
  Clarifying amendments are proposed to be made to
  sections 1.16, paragraphs (a) and (f); and 1.17, paragraphs 
  
  (h) and (i).  These proposed amendments do not affect the
  substance of the rules.
  
  The fees set forth in current section 1.17, paragraphs
  (i)(1) and (i)(2), are proposed to be consolidated into a 
  new paragraph (i).    
  
  Discussion of Specific Rules
  
  If Title 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 1
  and 3, are amended as proposed:
  
  Section 1.1 would provide a special "Box Provisional Patent
  Application" address to assist the Mail Room in separating
  and processing provisional applications and mail relating
  thereto.
  
  Section 1.9 would have current paragraph (a) redesignated as
  subparagraph (a)(1).  A new subparagraph (a)(2) would be
  added to define the term "provisional application" as a U.S.
  national application filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(b).
  
  Sections 1.12 and 1.14 would have the reference to
  37 CFR 1.17(i)(1) replaced with a reference to
  37 CFR 1.17(i) because it is proposed that 37 CFR 1.17(i)(1)
  and (i)(2) be consolidated into a new paragraph (i) since
  the petition fees provided in existing paragraphs (i)(1) and
  (i)(2) are the same.
  
  Section 1.16 would list the basic filing fee for a
  provisional application as $75.00 for a small entity (see
  section 1.9(c)-(f)) or $150.00 for other than a small entity
  as contained in S. 2467 and H.R. 5110.  Since the filing fee
  for a provisional application is established by S. 2467 and
  H.R. 5110 as a 35 U.S.C. 41(a) fee, the filing fee for a
  provisional application will be subject to the 50 percent
  reduction provided for in 35 U.S.C. 41(h).  A complete
  provisional application does not require claims since no
  examination on the merits will be given to a provisional
  application.  However, provisional applications may be filed
  with one or more claims as part of the application.
  Nevertheless, no additional claim fee or multiple dependent
  claim fee will be required in a provisional application.
  
  Also, proposed section 1.16 paragraph (l), would establish
  the surcharge required by proposed section 1.53(d)(2) for
  filing the basic filing fee or the cover sheet required by
  proposed section 1.51(a)(2) for a provisional application at
  a time later than the provisional application filing date as
  $25.00 for a small entity or $50.00 for other than a small
  entity.  The $50.00/$25.00 surcharge set forth in proposed
  paragraph (l) for a provisional application is less than the
  $130.00/$65.00 surcharge set forth in paragraph (e) for all 
  other types of patent applications.  A reduced surcharge for
  a provisional application is proposed in view of the lower 
  filing fee required for a provisional application and in an
  attempt to minimize applicant's overall cost of filing a
  provisional application. 
  
  Clarifying changes would be made to section 1.16.  These
  changes do not affect the substance of the rule.  It is
  proposed to insert the words "basic fee" in paragraph (f) of
  section 1.16.  Paragraph (e) currently refers to "the basic
  filing fee".  Current Office practice allows a design
  application to be filed without the design filing fee or the
  oath/declaration as set forth in current section 1.53(d).
  The change to section 1.16(f) is merely for clarification.
  In addition, it is proposed to replace the word "cases"
  found in paragraph (a) with the word "applications", since
  the word "applications" is used elsewhere in the rule.
  
  Section 1.17 would amend paragraph (h) to provide that the
  $130.00 petition fee for filing a petition for correction of
  inventorship under 37 CFR 1.48 applies to all patent
  
  applications, except provisional applications which would be
  covered by new paragraph (q).
  
  The reference to section 1.60 in section 1.17(i)(1) would be
  deleted, since it is proposed that section 1.60 be removed.
  
  The words "of this part", in section 1.17, paragraphs (h)
  and (i), would be deleted, since the paragraphs currently
  refer to sections in parts other than Part 1.  No
  substantive change is intended by this proposal.
  
  Section 1.17(i) would be amended to clarify that petitions
  relating to the grant of a filing date under section 1.53
  are for applications other than provisional applications.
  Proposed paragraph (q) would address petitions relating to
  provisional applications.
  
  In addition, the rules would be simplified by combining
  current section 1.17(i)(1) and (i)(2) into new paragraph
  (i), since the petition fees provided in current paragraphs
  (i)(1) and (i)(2) are the same.  No substantive change is
  intended by this proposal.
  
  A new section 1.17(q) would be added to establish the fee
  for filing a petition for correction of inventorship under
  section 1.48 in a provisional application as $25.00 for a
  small entity or $50.00 for other than a small entity.  The
  $50.00/$25.00 petition fee would also be required by
  proposed section 1.53 for filing a petition to accord a
  provisional application a filing date or to convert an
  application filed under proposed section 1.53(b)(1) to a 
  provisional application.
  
  New sections 1.17(r) and (s) would be added to establish the
  fee for filing a submission after final rejection under
  section 1.129(a) and for each additional invention requested
  to be examined under section 1.129(b), respectively.  These
  fees have been set at $730.00 to cover the costs of
  processing the submission after final rejection and each
  additional invention requested to be examined.
  
  Paragraph (l) would be deleted from section 1.21 since the
  processing and retention fee required in existing section
  1.53(d) would be eliminated and the reference to section
  1.60 in paragraph (n) would be deleted since section 1.60
  would be removed.
  
  Section 1.28(a) would have the references to section 1.60
  deleted since section 1.60 would be removed.  Section
  1.28(a) would be amended to delete the references to section
  1.62 and to specify the procedure for establishing small
  entity status in continuation, divisional and
  continuation-in-part applications where small entity status
  has been established in a parent application.  Where the
  status as a small entity has been established in a parent
  application and is still proper, applicant could include, in
  a continuation, divisional or continuation-in-part
  application, either a reference to a verified statement
  claiming small entity status in the parent application or a
  copy of the verified statement filed in the parent
  application.
  
  Section 1.45(c) would state that each inventor named in a
  joint provisional application must have made a contribution
  to the subject matter disclosed in the application.  The
  existing language of paragraph (c) refers to "the subject
  matter of at least one claim" which would be inappropriate
  for provisional applications, since provisional applications
  may be filed without claims.
  
  Section 1.48, paragraphs (a)-(c), would specify that the
  procedures for correcting an error in inventorship set forth
  in those paragraphs relate to applications other than
  provisional applications.  A new paragraph (d) would
  establish a simplified procedure for adding the name of an
  inventor in a provisional application, where the name was
  originally omitted without deceptive intent.  Proposed
  paragraph (d) would not require the verified statement of
  facts by the original inventor or inventors, the oath or
  declaration by each actual inventor in compliance with
  section 1.63 or the consent of any assignee as currently
  required in paragraph (a).  The procedure would require the 
  filing of a petition identifying the name or names of the
  inventors to be added and including a statement that the
  name or names of the inventors were omitted through error
  without deceptive intention on the part of the actual
  inventor(s).  The statement would be required to be verified
  if made by a person not registered to practice before the
  Office.  The statement could be signed by a registered
  practitioner acting in a representative capacity under
  section 1.34(a).  The $50.00/$25.00 petition fee set forth
  in proposed section 1.17(q) would also be required.
  
  Under 35 U.S.C. 119(e), as contained in S. 2467 and
  H.R. 5110, a later filed complete application may claim
  priority benefits based on a copending provisional
  application so long as the applications have at least one
  inventor in common.  An error in naming a person as an
  inventor in a provisional application would not require
  correction by deleting the erroneously named inventor from
  the provisional application since this would have no effect
  upon the ability of the provisional application to serve as
  a basis for a priority claim.  Therefore, proposed section
  1.48(d) would not provide a procedure for deleting a named
  inventor.  Any request to delete a named inventor filed in a
  provisional application would be properly treated as a
  petition under section 1.182.  As a condition to granting
  any petition to delete a named inventor in a provisional
  application and in order to protect the rights of the
  inventors/assignees involved, the Office may require a
  statement from all of the named inventors and/or the written
  consent of any assignee.
  
  Section 1.51 would include a new subparagraph (a)(2)
  identifying the required parts of a complete provisional
  application.  The complete provisional application would
  include a cover sheet, a specification as prescribed in
  35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph, any necessary drawings and
  the provisional application filing fee.  A suggested cover
  sheet format for a provisional application will be available
  from the Office free of charge to the public.  The cover
  sheet as set forth by proposed subparagraph (a)(2)(i) would
  identify (1) the application as a provisional application,
  (2) the name or names of the inventor or inventors, (3) the
  title of the invention, (4) the name and registration number
  of the attorney or agent (if applicable), (5) the docket
  number used by the person filing the application to identify
  the application (if applicable), and (6) the correspondence
  address, all of which is information required in order to
  properly prepare the provisional application filing receipt.
  
  The Office currently receives thousands of papers and fees
  every work day.  Most papers filed in the Office are
  received in the Correspondence and Mail Division which must 
  identify and route each paper to the appropriate area for
  consideration.  Among the papers which may currently be
  filed in the Office are disclosure documents, which may
  comprise a written description and drawings, and
  applications for patent, some of which may be incomplete
  because claims are omitted.  Further, applications for
  patent are frequently received in the Office without the
  filing fee or the oath/declaration required by section 1.63.
  With the inception of provisional application practice, the
  Office will begin receiving another type of document
  resembling either a disclosure document or an incomplete
  application for patent and which may comprise nothing more
  than a written description and drawings.  The potential for
  Office error, e.g., misinterpreting a paper intended as a
  provisional application as some other type of document, will
  obviously increase.  Further, with the inception of a
  twenty-year patent term, it will be highly desirable for the
  Office to process applications, as well as all other papers
  which the Office receives, quickly and correctly.
  
  While the name or names of the inventors are required in
  order to accord a provisional application a filing date, a
  provisional application is not required to be signed by the
  inventor or the assignee.  No oath or declaration is
  required.  Presumably, most provisional applications will be
  filed by a registered practitioner without a power of
  attorney being filed.  If an essential part, e.g., the
  drawings, of the provisional application is omitted or if
  the filing fee did not accompany the application, the Office
  will need a correspondence address to notify the applicant
  of the omission.
  
  The cover sheet required in section 1.51 would provide the
  Correspondence and Mail Division with a paper specifically
  identifying the document as a provisional application and
  would provide the Application Processing Division with most
  of the information it will need to promptly and properly
  process the provisional application and to prepare the
  official filing receipt.  The cover sheet would also provide
  applicants and practitioners with a checklist prior to the
  filing of the provisional application.
  Since no substantive examination would be given to any
  provisional application, the filing of an information
  disclosure statement in a provisional application is
  unnecessary and will not be permitted.  Therefore,
  paragraph (b) of section 1.51 would make it clear that the
  Office will not accept an information disclosure statement
  in a provisional application.  Any information disclosure
  statements filed in a provisional application would either
  be returned or disposed of at the convenience of the Office.
  
   Section 1.53 would have the title and paragraph (a) revised
  to refer to application number, rather than application
  serial number.  The term "application number" is found in
  current section 1.5(a).
  
  A new paragraph (b)(2) would be added to section 1.53
  setting forth the requirements for obtaining a filing date
  for a provisional application.  Existing paragraph (b) would
  be redesignated as paragraph (b)(1) and would be amended to:
  (1) refer to section 1.17(i) rather than 1.17(i)(1) to
  conform to the proposed change therein; (2) delete the
  reference to section 1.60 which is proposed to be removed;
  and (3) clarify that continuations, divisions and
  continuations-in-part may be filed under either section 1.53
  or 1.62.  Paragraph (b)(2) would state that a filing date
  would be accorded to a provisional application as of the
  date the written description, any necessary drawings and the
  names of all inventors are filed in the Office.  The filing
  date requirements for a provisional application set forth in
  new paragraph (b)(2) parallel the existing requirements set
  forth in current paragraph (b), except that no claim would
  be required.  In order to keep the cost of processing
  provisional applications down and to reduce the handling of
  the provisional applications, amendments, other than those
  required to make the provisional application comply with
  applicable regulations, would not be permitted after the
  filing date of the provisional application.
  
  New section 1.53(b)(2)(i) would require all provisional
  applications to be filed with a cover sheet identifying the
  application as a provisional application.  The paragraph
  would also indicate that the Office will treat an
  application as having been filed under paragraph (b)(1),
  unless the application is identified as a provisional
  application.  This proposal is similar to the current
  requirement in section 1.62 that the application include a
  specific request for an application under section 1.62.  The
  cover sheet with identification that a provisional
  application is intended should greatly assist the
  Correspondence and Mail Division in distinguishing
  provisional applications from other types of applications. A
  provisional application, which is identified as such, but
  which does not have a complete cover sheet as required by
  section 1.51(a)(2)(i) would be treated as a provisional
  application.  The complete cover sheet and a surcharge would
  be required to be submitted at a later date.
  
  Section 1.53(b)(2)(ii) would establish a procedure for
  converting an application filed under section 1.53(b)(1) to
  a provisional application.  The procedure would require the
  filing of a petition requesting the conversion and the
  $50.00/$25.00 petition fee set forth in section 1.17(q). 
  Filing of the petition in the application would be required
  prior to the payment of the issue fee or prior to 12 months 
  after its filing date, whichever event is earlier.  The
  grant of any such petition would not entitle applicant to a 
  refund of the fees properly paid in the application filed
  under section 1.53(b)(1).
  
  Section 1.53(b)(2)(iii) is intended to call attention to the
  provisions of S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 which prohibit any
  provisional application from claiming a right of priority
  under 35 U.S.C. 119 or 365(a) or the benefit of an earlier
  filing date under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c) of any other
  application.  Attention would be called to the provisions of
  the legislation which provide that no claim for benefit of
  an earlier filing date may be made in a design application
  based on a provisional application and that no request for a
  statutory invention registration may be filed in a
  provisional application.  Section 1.53(b)(2)(iii) would
  specify that the requirements of section 1.821(e), relating
  to the filing of a copy of the "Sequence Listing" in
  computer readable form, are not applicable to a provisional
  application.  It is noted that all other sequence
  requirements as set forth in sections 1.821 through 1.823
  and 1.825 are applicable to a provisional application. 
  
  Section 1.53(c) would require that any request for review of
  a refusal to accord an application a filing date be made by
  way of a petition accompanied by the fee set forth in
  section 1.17(i), i.e., $130.00, if the application was filed
  under section 1.53(b)(1), or by the fee set forth in section
  1.17(q), i.e., $50.00/$25.00, if the application was filed
  under section 1.53(b)(2).  This reflects the current
  practice set forth in section 506.02 of the Manual of Patent
  Examining Procedure (MPEP) with regard to any request for
  review of a refusal to accord a filing date for an
  application.  The Office would continue its current practice
  of refunding the petition fee, if the refusal to accord the
  requested filing date is found to have been an Office error.
  Current paragraph (d) of section 1.53 would be redesignated
  as paragraph (d)(1) and would be amended to delete the
  references to the processing and retention fee practice
  which would be eliminated by this proposal in view of the
  proposed provisional application practice.  Under proposed
  paragraph (d)(2), the provisional application could be filed
  without the basic filing fee (set by S. 2467 and H.R. 5110
  as $150.00 for other than a small entity, subject to a
  50 percent reduction for small entity) and without the
  complete cover sheet required by proposed section 
  1.51(a)(2).  In such a case, the proposed rule provides that
  the applicant will be notified and be given a period of time
  in which to file the missing fee, and/or cover sheet and to
  pay the surcharge set forth in proposed section 1.16(l).
  
  Section 1.53(e)(2) would be added to indicate that a
  provisional application would not be given a substantive
  examination and would be abandoned no later than twelve (12)
  months after its filing date as set forth in S. 2467 and
  H.R. 5110.
  
  Section 1.55 would have the reference to 35 U.S.C. 119
  replaced with a reference to 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d) and would
  specify that a provisional application is not entitled to
  the right of foreign priority under proposed
  35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d).  S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 amend
  35 U.S.C. 119 by assigning letters (a), (b), (c) and (d) to
  the existing paragraphs of 35 U.S.C. 119.  These paragraphs
  are directed to claims for foreign priority.  In addition,
  35 U.S.C. 111 is amended to provide that a provisional
  application may not claim or be entitled to the right of
  foreign priority of any other application under
  35 U.S.C. 119.  Therefore, provisional applications are not
  included in section 1.55.  In addition, the reference to
  37 CFR 1.17(i)(1) would be replaced by 37 CFR 1.17(i) to be 
  consistent with the proposed change to section 1.17.  No
  substantive change is intended by this proposal.
  
  Section 1.59 would delete the reference to the processing
  and retention fee which is proposed to be eliminated from
  section 1.53(d).
  
  Section 1.60 would be removed and reserved.  The procedures
  set forth in section 1.60 for filing a continuation or
  divisional application are unnecessary in view of the recent
  rule change to section 1.6(d) which permits the filing of a
  copy of the signed oath or declaration.  This is appropriate
  since neither the statute nor the rules require a recent
  date of execution to appear on the oath or declaration and
  the duty of disclosure requirements under section 1.56 would
  apply to the continuing application.  The issue of a stale
  oath or declaration would be eliminated by appropriately
  amending the procedures set forth in the Manual of Patent
  Examining Procedure.
  
  The Office currently receives a number of petitions
  requesting that an application filed under section 1.60 be
  accepted even though at the time of filing of the
  application, applicant failed to comply with all the
  requirements of section 1.60 due to inadvertent error on the
   part of the applicant.  The deletion of section 1.60 will
  help reduce the number of petitions and will simplify the
  procedures for filing an application for both the Office and
  patent practitioners.  Applicants may use the procedures set
  forth in section 1.53 to file a continuation or divisional
  application under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) by providing the Office
  with a copy of the prior application.  Failure to submit a
  complete copy of the prior application may be corrected by
  way of a petition under section 1.182.
  
  Section 1.62 would state that the procedure could be used
  for filing a continuation, division or continuation-in-part
  of a complete application filed under section 1.53(b)(1) but
  not a provisional application under section 1.53(b)(2).  The
  section would specifically preclude the use of the file
  wrapper continuing procedures set forth in section 1.62 for
  filing the first complete application under 35 U.S.C. 111(a)
  which claims the benefit of an earlier filing date of a
  provisional application.  In view of the relatively small
  filing fee for a provisional application and the fact that
  the provisional application will not be examined, Office
  handling must be kept to a minimum and these provisional
  applications, once complete, will be sent to the Files
  Repository for storage rather than being kept in the
  examination area of the Office.  It would be burdensome for
  the Office to retrieve these provisional applications so
  that an applicant could use the procedures set forth in
  section 1.62.  Furthermore, since claims and an oath or
  declaration are not required in a provisional application
  and the first complete application would most likely contain
  additional subject matter not disclosed in the provisional
  application, the procedures set forth in section 1.53 for
  filing an application will meet applicants' needs. 
  
  Reference to 37 CFR 1.17(i)(1) in section 1.62(e) would be
  replaced by 37 CFR 1.17(i) to be consistent with the
  proposed change to section 1.17.  Furthermore, the phrase
  "Serial number, filing date" in section 1.62(a) and the term
  "application serial number" in section 1.62(e) would be
  
  changed to "application number."  The term "application
  number" is found in current section 1.5(a).
  
  Section 1.63(a) would have the reference to section
  1.51(a)(2) replaced with a reference to section
  1.51(a)(1)(ii) in order to conform with the proposed changes
  in section 1.51.
  
  Section 1.67(b) would have the reference to section 1.53(d)
  replaced with a reference to section 1.53(d)(1) in order to
  conform with the proposed changes in section 1.53. 
  Furthermore, the references to sections 1.53(b) and 1.118
  would be deleted to make clear that the new matter exclusion
  applies to all applications including those filed under
  section 1.62.
  
  Section 1.78(a)(1) and (a)(2) would specifically preclude a
  provisional application from claiming the benefit of an
  earlier filing date of a prior copending application filed
  in the United States under section 1.53(b)(1) or 1.62.
  S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 amend 35 U.S.C. 111 to provide that a
  provisional application is not entitled to the benefit of an
  earlier filing date in the United States under
  35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c).  Furthermore, the reference in
  section 1.78(a)(1) to the processing and retention fee
  required in existing section 1.53(d) would be deleted.  The
  use of serial number and filing date in section 1.78(a)(2)
  as an identifier for a prior application would be eliminated
  to avoid any confusion as to whether an application
  identified by its serial number and filing date is an
  application filed under proposed section 1.53(b)(1) or 1.62
  or a design application since there is a different series
  code assigned to each of these types of applications. 
  
  In addition, new subparagraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4) would be
  added to section 1.78 to set forth the procedures for
  claiming the benefit of an earlier filing date based on a
  prior filed copending provisional application.  The later
  filed application must be an application other than for a
  design patent and must be copending with the provisional
  application, which will be abandoned by operation of law no
  later than 12 months after filing.  There must be a common
  inventor named in both the prior provisional application and
  the later filed application.  The prior provisional
  application must be complete as set forth in proposed
  section 1.51(a)(2), or entitled to a filing date as set
  forth in proposed section 1.53(b)(2) and include the basic
  filing fee.  Newly added subparagraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4)
  parallel the existing requirements set forth in
  
  subparagraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) for other than a provisional
  application.
  
  Section 1.83 would have current paragraph (a) redesignated
  as subparagraph (a)(1) and would clarify that this paragraph
  relates to the content of the drawings in applications other
  than provisional applications.  A new subparagraph (a)(2)
  would set forth the required content of the drawings filed
  in a provisional application.  Since claims would not be
  required in a provisional application, the drawings filed in
  a provisional application would be required to show every 
  feature of the invention disclosed in the description,
  rather than specified in the claims as in subparagraph
  (a)(1), where necessary to understand the subject matter of
  the invention.  In addition, the reference to paragraph (a)
  in section 1.83(c) would be replaced by a reference to
  paragraph (a)(1).
  
  Section 1.97(d) would have the reference to section
  1.17(i)(1) replaced with a reference to section 1.17(i) to
  be consistent with the proposed change to section 1.17.  No
  substantive change is intended by this proposal.
  
  
  
  Section 1.101(a) would indicate that provisional
  applications filed under section 1.53(b)(2) would not be
  examined.
  
  Section 1.102(d) would have the reference to section
  1.17(i)(2) replaced with a reference to section 1.17(i) to
  be consistent with the proposed change to section 1.17.  No
  substantive change is intended by this proposal.
  
  Section 1.103(a) would have the reference to section
  1.17(i)(1) replaced with a reference to section 1.17(i) to
  be consistent with the proposed change to section 1.17.  No
  substantive change is intended by this proposal.
  
  Section 1.129 would be added to set forth the procedure for
  implementing certain transitional provisions contained in
  S. 2467 and H.R. 5110.  These transitional provisions are
  not applicable to any application which is filed on or after
  the effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2) or to any design
  or reissue application.  Paragraph (a) of proposed
  section 1.129 would provide for limited reexamination in
  certain applications pending for 2 years or longer as of the
  effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2), taking into account
  any reference to any earlier application under
  35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c).  Under the proposed procedure,
  an applicant would be entitled to have a first submission
  entered and considered on the merits after final rejection
  if (1) the submission is filed prior to or simultaneously
  with the filing of a notice of appeal and prior to
  abandonment of the application and (2) the $730.00 fee set
  forth in proposed section 1.17(r) is paid within one month
  of any written notification from the Office refusing entry
  of the first submission and prior to abandonment of the
  application.  If applicant complies with the requirements of
  the proposed rule, the finality of the previous rejection
  would be withdrawn and the submission would be entered and
  considered on the merits to the extent that the submission
  would have been considered if made prior to final rejection.
  The  subsequent Office action could be made final under
  existing Office practice.  If a subsequent final rejection
  is made in the application, applicant would be entitled to
  have a second submission entered and considered on the
  merits under the same conditions set forth for consideration
  of the first submission.  Paragraph (a) would also define
  the term "submission" as including, but not limited to, an
  information disclosure statement, an amendment to the
  written description, claims or drawings and a new
  substantive argument or new evidence in support of
  patentability.  For example, the submission may include an
  amendment, a new substantive argument and an information
  disclosure statement.  In view of the $730.00 fee required
  in proposed section 1.17(r), any information disclosure
  statement previously refused consideration in the
  application because of applicant's failure to provide the
  certification under section 1.97(e) or to pay the fee set
  forth in section 1.17(p) or which is filed as part of either
  the first or second submission would be treated as though it
  had been filed within one of the time periods set forth in
  section 1.97(b) and would be considered without the petition
  and petition fee required in section 1.97(d), if it complies
  with the requirements of section 1.98.
  
  Paragraph (b) of proposed section 1.129 would provide for
  examination of more than one independent and distinct
  invention in certain applications pending for 3 years or
  longer as of the effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2),
  taking into account any reference to any earlier application
  under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c).  Under the proposed
  procedure, a requirement for restriction or for the filing
  of divisional applications would only be made or maintained
  in the application after the effective date of
  35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2) if:  (1) the requirement was made in the
  application or in an earlier application relied on under
  35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c) more than two months prior to
  the effective date; (2) the examiner has not issued any
  Office action in the application due to actions by the
  applicant; or (3) the required fee for examination of each
  additional invention was not paid.  If the application
  contains claims to more than one independent and distinct
  invention, and no requirement for restriction or for the
  filing of divisional applications can be made or maintained
  as a result of proposed section 1.129(b), applicant will be
  notified and given a one month time period to pay the
  $730.00 fee set forth in proposed section 1.17(s) for each
  independent and distinct invention claimed in the
  application in excess of one.  The fee set forth in proposed
  section 1.17(s) would not be subject to the 50 percent
  reduction for a small entity.  The additional inventions for
  which the required fee under section 1.17(s) has not been
  paid would be  withdrawn from consideration under
  section 1.142(b).  An applicant who desires examination of
  an invention so withdrawn from consideration can file a
  divisional application under 35 U.S.C. 121. 
  
  Section 1.139 would be added to set forth the procedures for
  reviving a provisional application where the delay was
  unavoidable or unintentional.  Paragraph (a) would address
  the revival of a provisional application where the delay was
  unavoidable and paragraph (b) would address the revival of a
  provisional application where the delay was unintentional.
  Applicant may petition to have an abandoned provisional
  application revived as a pending provisional application for
  a period of no longer than twelve months from the filing
  date of the provisional application where the delay was
  unavoidable or unintentional.  It would be permissible to
  file a petition for revival later than twelve months from
  the filing date of the provisional application but only to
  revive the application for the twelve-month period following
  filing.  Thus, even if the petition were granted to
  reestablish the pendency up to the end of the twelve-month
  period, the provisional application would not be considered 
  pending after twelve months from its filing date.  The
  requirements for reviving an abandoned provisional
  application set forth in this new rule parallel the existing
  requirements set forth in section 1.137.
  
  Sections 1.177, 1.312(b), 1.313(a), 1.314 and 1.666 would
  have the reference to section 1.17(i)(1) replaced with a
  reference to section 1.17(i) to be consistent with the
  proposed change to section 1.17.  No substantive change is
  intended by these proposals.
  
  Section 1.701 would be added to provide for the extension of
  patent term where the issuance of a patent on an application
  filed after the implementation date of the 20-year patent
  term provisions of S. 2467 and H.R. 5110, other than for
  designs, was delayed due to certain causes of prosecution
  delay.  By virtue of 35 U.S.C. 173, the term of a patent and
  patent term extension under proposed 35 U.S.C. 154 do not
  apply to patents for designs.
  
  The provisions for patent term extension under proposed
  section 1.701 are separate from and in addition to the
  patent term extension provisions of 35 U.S.C. 156.  The
  patent term extension provisions of S. 2467 and H.R. 5110
  are designed to compensate the patent owner for delays in
  issuing a patent, whereas the patent term extension
  provisions of 35 U.S.C. 156 are designed to restore term
  lost to premarket regulatory review after the grant of a 
  patent.  In order to prevent a term extension under proposed
  section 1.701 from precluding a term extension under
  35 U.S.C. 156, S. 2467 and H.R. 5110 amend
  35 U.S.C. 156(a)(2) to provide that the term has never been
  extended under 35 U.S.C. 156(e)(1).
  
  Under proposed 35 U.S.C. 154(b)(1), if the issuance of a
  patent is delayed due to proceedings under 35 U.S.C. 135(a)
  and/or the application is placed under a secrecy order under
  35 U.S.C. 181, the term of a patent could be extended for
  the period of delay up to five years.  Proceedings under
  35 U.S.C. 135(a) include any appeal to federal court.  Under
  proposed 35 U.S.C. 154(b)(2), if the issuance of a patent is
  delayed due to appellate review by the Board of Patent
  Appeals and Interferences or by a federal court and the
  patent was issued pursuant to a decision reversing an
  adverse determination of patentability and if the patent is
  not subject to a terminal disclaimer due to the issuance of
  another patent claiming subject matter that is not
  patentably distinct from that under appellate review, the
  term of the patent could be extended for the period of delay
  up to five years.  Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 154(b)(4), as
  contained in S. 2467 and H.R. 5110, the term of a patent
  could only be extended under 35 U.S.C. 154(b)(1) and (b)(2)
  for a maximum of five years regardless of whether there were
  delays due to more than one of the reasons covered under
  35 U.S.C. 154(b)(1) and (2).  Proposed subparagraph (c)(1)
  of section 1.701 sets forth the method for calculating the
  period of delay where the delay was a result of proceedings
  under 35 U.S.C. 135(a).  Proposed subparagraph (c)(2) sets
  forth the method for calculating the period of delay where
  the delay was a result of the application being placed under
  a secrecy order.  Proposed subparagraph (c)(3) sets forth
  the method for calculating the period of delay where the
  delay was a result of appellate review.  Pursuant to
  proposed section 1.701(d)(1), the period of delay set forth
  in subparagraph (c)(3) shall be reduced by any time
  calculated under subparagraph (c)(3) before the expiration
  of three years from the filing date of the first national
  patent application presented for examination.  The filing
  date for the purpose of section 1.701(d)(1) would be the
  earliest effective U.S. filing date but not including the
  filing date of a provisional application or the
  international filing date of a PCT application.  For PCT
  applications entering the national stage, the filing date
  for the purpose of section 1.701(d)(1) would be the date on
  which applicant has complied with the requirements of
  section 1.494(b), or section 1.495(b) if applicable.
  Pursuant to proposed section 1.701(d)(2), the period of
  delay set forth in subparagraph (c)(3) shall also be reduced
  by any time, as determined by the Commissioner, during which
   the applicant did not act with due diligence.  The standard
  for determining due diligence is whether the applicant
  exhibited that degree of timeliness as may reasonably be
  expected from, and which is ordinarily exercised by, a
  person during the pendency period of the application.
  Examples of what may constitute lack of due diligence for
  this purpose include requests for extensions of time to
  respond to Office communications, submission of a response
  which is not fully responsive to an Office communication,
  and filing of informal applications.  Applicants need not
  file a request for the extension of patent term under
  proposed section 1.701.  The extension of patent term is
  automatic by operation of law.  It is currently anticipated
  that applicant would be advised as to the length of any
  patent term extension at the time of receiving the Notice of
  Allowance and Issue Fee Due.  Review of any determination as
  to the length of patent term extension would be by way of
  petition under section 1.181.
  
  Section 3.21 would eliminate the use of serial number and
  filing date as an identifier for national patent
  applications in assignment documents.  This proposal would
  eliminate any confusion as to whether an application
  identified by its serial number and filing date in an
  assignment document is an application filed under proposed
  section 1.53(b)(1) or 1.62 or a design application or a
  provisional application since there is a different series
  code assigned to each of these types of applications.  If an
  assignment was executed after the filing of the national
  application, the assignment would be required to identify
  the application by the application number, consisting of the
  series code and serial number, e.g., 07/123,456 (for
  applications filed under proposed section 1.53(b)(1) or
  1.62), 29/123,456 (for design applications) or 59/123,456
  (for provisional applications filed under proposed
  section 1.53(b)(2)).  The series code would be required
  since it would clearly identify the application to which the
  assignment document is directed.
  
  Section 3.21 would be further clarified to indicate that
  existing requirements relating to assignments executed
  before the filing of the application refer to applications
  other than provisional applications.  Section 3.21 would be
  further amended to specify the requirements for identifying
  a provisional application in an assignment executed before
  the filing of the provisional application.  The assignment
  would be required to identify the provisional application by
  name of each inventor and the title of the invention.  The
  date of execution of the provisional application would not
  be required since a provisional application need not be
  executed by the inventors.
  
   Section 3.81 would have the reference to section 1.17(i)(1)
  replaced with a reference to section 1.17(i) to be
  consistent with the proposed change to section 1.17.  No
  substantive change is intended by this proposal.
  
  Other Considerations
  
  
  The proposed rule changes are in conformity with the
  requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601
  et seq., Executive Order 12612, and the Paperwork Reduction
  Act of 1980, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.  This proposed rule has
  been determined to be not significant for the purposes of
  E.O. 12866.
  
  The Assistant General Counsel for Legislation and Regulation
  of the Department of Commerce has certified to the Chief
  Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business Administration, that
  the proposed rule changes will not have a significant
  economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
  (Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b)).  The
  principal impact of these changes is to provide a procedure
  for domestic applicants to quickly and inexpensively file a
  provisional application.  The filing date of the provisional
  application will not be used to measure the term of a patent
  granted on an application which claims the earlier filing
  date of the provisional application.
  
  The Patent and Trademark Office has also determined that
  this notice has no Federalism implications affecting the
  relationship between the National Government and the States
  as outlined in E.O. 12612.
  
  These proposed rules contain collections of information
  subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act
  (Act).  The provisional application has been approved by the
  Office of Management and Budget under control numbers
  0651-0031 and 0651-0032.  The cover sheet is necessary to
  expedite the processing of a provisional application and
  improve quality.  Public reporting burden for the collection
  of information on the cover sheet is estimated to average 12
  minutes per response, including the time for reviewing
  instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and
  maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing
  the collection of information.  Send comments regarding this
  burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of
  information, including suggestions for reducing the burden
  to the Office of Assistance Quality and Enhancement
  Division, Patent and Trademark Office, Washington, D.C.
  20231, and to the Office of Information and Regulatory
  Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Washington, D.C.
  20503.
   
  Notice is hereby given that pursuant to the authority
  granted to the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks by
  35 U.S.C. 6, the Patent and Trademark Office proposes to
  amend Title 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set
  forth below.
  List of Subjects
  
  37 CFR Part 1
  Administrative practice and procedure, Courts, Freedom of
  Information, Inventions and patents, Reporting and record
  keeping requirements, Small businesses.
  
  37 CFR Part 3
  Administrative practice and procedure, Inventions and
  patents, Reporting and record keeping requirements.
  
  For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 37 CFR Parts 1
  and 3 are proposed to be amended as follows, with removals
  (other than section 1.60 which is proposed to be removed and
  reserved) indicated by brackets ([]) and additions by arrows
  (><):
  
  PART 1 - RULES OF PRACTICE IN PATENT CASES
  
  1.  The authority citation for 37 CFR Part 1 would continue
  to read as follows:
  
  Authority:  35 U.S.C. 6 unless otherwise noted.
  
  
  2.  Section 1.1 is proposed to be amended by adding new
  paragraph (i) to read as follows:
  
    1.1 All communications to be addressed to Commissioner of
  Patents and Trademarks.
  *  *  *  *  *
       >(i) The filing of all provisional applications and any
  communications relating thereto should be additionally
  marked "Box Provisional Patent Application."<
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  3.  Section 1.9 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (a) to read as follows:
  
    1.9 Definitions. 
         (a)>(1)< A national application as used in this chapter
  means a U.S. national application for patent which was
  either filed in the Office under 35 U.S.C. 111 or which
  resulted from an international application after compliance
  with 35 U.S.C. 371.
    >(a)(2) A provisional application as used in this
  chapter means a U.S. national application for patent filed
  in the Office under 35 U.S.C. 111(b).<
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  4.  Section 1.12 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (c) to read as follows:
  
    1.12 Assignment records open to public inspection.
  *  *  *  *  *    
    (c) Any request by a member of the public seeking
  copies of any assignment records of any pending or abandoned
  patent application preserved in secrecy under   1.14, or any
  information with respect thereto, must
    (1) Be in the form of a petition accompanied by the
  petition fee set forth in   1.17(i)[(1)], or
    (2) Include written authority granting access to the
  member of the public to the particular assignment records
  from the applicant or applicant's assignee or attorney or
  agent of record.
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  5.  Section 1.14 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (e) to read as follows:
  
    1.14 Patent applications preserved in secrecy.
  *  *  *  *  *
    (e) Any request by a member of the public seeking
  access to, or copies of, any pending or abandoned
  application preserved in secrecy pursuant to paragraphs (a)
  and (b) of this section, or any papers relating thereto,
  must
        (1) Be in the form of a petition and be accompanied by
  the petition fee set forth in   1.17(i)[(1)], or
        (2) Include written authority granting access to the
  member of the public in that particular application from 
  the
  applicant or the applicant's assignee or attorney or agent
  of record.
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  6.  Section 1.16 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraphs (a)-(g) and by adding new paragraphs (k) and (l)
  to read as follows:
  
    1.16 National application filing fees.
  (a) Basic fee for filing each application for an original
  patent, except >provisional,< design or plant >applications<
  [cases]:
    By a small entity ( 1.9(f))...................$365.00
    By other than a small entity...................730.00
   (b) In addition to the basic filing fee in an original
  application, >except provisional applications,< for filing
  or later presentation of each independent claim in excess of
  3:
    By a small entity ( 1.9(f))....................38.00   
       By other than a small entity....................76.00
  (c) In addition to the basic filing fee in an original
  application, >except provisional applications,< for filing
  or later presentation of each claim (whether independent or
  dependent) in excess of 20 (Note that   1.75(c) indicates
  how multiple dependent claims are considered for fee
  calculation purposes.):  
    By a small entity (  1.9(f)).................... 11.00
    By other than a small entity ................... 22.00
  (d) In addition to the basic filing fee in an original
  application, >except provisional applications,< if the
  application contains, or is amended to contain, a multiple
  dependent claim(s), per application:                         
      By a small entity (  1.9(f)).................... 120.00
       By other than a small entity.................... 240.00
   (If the additional fees required by paragraphs (b), (c),
  and (d) of this section are not paid on filing or on later
  presentation of the claims for which the additional fees are
  due, they must be paid or the claims canceled by amendment,
  prior to the expiration of the time period set for response
  by the Office in any notice of fee deficiency.)
  (e) Surcharge for filing the basic filing fee or oath or
  declaration on a date later than the filing date of the
  application>, except provisional applications<:
    By a small entity (  1.9(f))......................65.00
    By other than a small entity.....................130.00
  (f) >Basic fee< for filing each design application:
    By a small entity (  1.9(f)).....................150.00
    By other than a small entity.....................300.00
  (g) Basic fee for filing each plant application>, except
  provisional applications,<:
    By a small entity (  1.9(f)).....................245.00
    By other than a small entity.....................490.00
  *  *  *  *  *
  >(k) Basic fee for filing each provisional application:
    By a small entity (  1.9(f))......................75.00
       By other than a small entity.....................150.00
  (l) Surcharge for filing the basic filing fee or cover sheet
  (  1.51(a)(2)(i)) on a date later than the filing date of
  the provisional application:
         By a small entity (  1.9(f))......................25.00
    By other than a small entity ....................50.00<
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  7.  Section 1.17 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraphs (h) and (i)(1), by removing paragraph (i)(2), and
  by adding new paragraphs (q), (r) and (s) to read as
  follows:
  
  
    1.17 Patent application processing fees.
  *  *  *  *  *
  (h) For filing a petition to the Commissioner under a
  section [of this part] listed below which refers to this
  paragraph.............................................130.00 
    1.47 - for filing by other than all the inventors or a
  person not the inventor. 
     1.48 - for correction of inventorship>, except in
  provisional applications<. 
    1.182 - for decision on questions not specifically
  provided for.
     1.183 - to suspend the rules. 
     1.295 - for review of refusal to publish a statutory
  invention registration.
     1.377 - for review of decision refusing to accept and
  record payment of a maintenance fee filed prior to
  expiration of patent.
     1.378(e) - for reconsideration of decision on petition   
  refusing to accept delayed payment of maintenance fee in
  expired patent.
     1.644(e) - for petition in an interference.
     1.644(f) - for request for reconsideration of a decision
  on petition in an interference.
     1.666(c) - for late filing of interference settlement 
  agreement.
      5.12, 5.13 & 5.14 - for expedited handling of a foreign 
  filing license.
     5.15 - for changing the scope of a license.
     5.25 - for retroactive license.
  (i)[(1)] For filing a petition to the Commissioner under a
  section [of this part] listed below which refers to this
  paragraph.............................................130.00 
    1.12 - for access to an assignment record. 
     1.14 - for access to an application.
     1.53 - to accord a filing date>, except in provisional
  applications<.  
     1.55 - for entry of late priority papers.
   [  1.60 - to accord a filing date.]
     1.62 - to accord a filing date.
     1.97(d)- to consider an information disclosure statement.
    >  1.102 - to make application special.< 
     1.103 - to suspend action in application. 
     1.177 - for divisional reissues to issue separately. 
     1.312 - for amendment after payment of issue fee. 
     1.313 - to withdraw an application from issue. 
     1.314 - to defer issuance of a patent. 
     1.666(b) - for access to interference settlement
  agreement.
     3.81 - for patent to issue to assignee, assignment
  submitted after payment of the issue fee.
  [(2) For filing a petition to the Commissioner under   1.102
  of this part to make application special.............130.00]
  *  *  *  *  *
  >(q) For filing a petition to the Commissioner under a
  section listed below which refers to this paragraph:
    By a small entity (  1.9(f))......................25.00
    By other than a small entity......................50.00
     1.48 - for correction of inventorship in a provisional
  application.
     1.53 - to accord a provisional application a filing date
  or to convert an application filed under   1.53(b)(1) to a  
  provisional application.
  (r) For filing a submission after final rejection under
    1.129(a)...........................................730.00
  (s) For each additional invention requested to be examined
  under   1.129(b).....................................730.00<
  
  8.  Section 1.21 is proposed to be amended by removing
  paragraph (l), by revising paragraph (n), and republishing
  the introductory text to read as follows:
  
    1.21 Miscellaneous fees and charges.
  The Patent and Trademark Office has established the
  following fees for the services indicated:
  *  *  *  *  *
  (l) >[Reserved]< [For processing and retaining any
  application abandoned pursuant to   1.53(d) unless the
  required basic filing fee has been paid.............$130.00]
  *  *  *  *  *
  (n) For handling an incomplete or improper application under
    1.53(c)[,   1.60] or   1.62.....................$130.00
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  9.  Section 1.28 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (a) to read as follows:
  
    1.28 Effect on fees of failure to establish status, or 
  change status, as a small entity.
  (a) The failure to establish status as a small entity     
  (   1.9(f) and 1.27 of this part) in any application or
  patent prior to paying, or at the time of paying, any fee
  precludes payment of the fee in the amount established for
  small entities.  A refund pursuant to   1.26 of this part,
  based on establishment of small entity status, of a portion
  of fees timely paid in full prior to establishing status as
  a small entity may only be obtained if a verified statement
  under   1.27 and a request for a refund of the excess amount
  are filed within two months of the date of the timely
  payment of the full fee.  The two-month time period is not
  extendable under   1.136.  Status as a small entity is
  waived for any fee by the failure to establish the status
  prior to paying, at the time of paying, or within two months
  of the date of payment of, the fee.  Status as a small
  entity must be specifically established [by a verified
  statement filed] in each application or patent in which the
  status is available and desired[, except those applications
  filed under   1.60 or   1.62 of this part where the status
  as a small entity has been established in a parent
  application and is still proper].  >Status as a small entity
  in one application or patent does not affect any other
  application or patent, including applications or patents
  which are directly or indirectly dependent upon the
  application or patent in which the status has been
  established.  Applications filed as continuations, divisions
  or continuations-in-part of a parent application must
  include a reference to a verified statement in the parent
  application or include a copy of the verified statement
  filed in the parent application if status as a small entity
  is still proper and desired.<  Once status as a small entity
  has been established in an application or patent, the status
  remains in that application or patent without the filing of
  a further verified statement pursuant to   1.27 of this part
  unless the Office is notified of a change in status. [Status
  as a small entity in one application or patent does not
  affect any other application or patent, including
  applications or patents which are directly or indirectly
  dependent upon the application or patent in which the status
  has been established, except those filed under   1.60 or
    1.62 of this part.  Applications filed under   1.60
  or   1.62 of this part must include a reference to a
  verified statement in a parent application if status as a
  small entity is still proper and desired.]
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  10.  Section 1.45 paragraph (c) is proposed to be revised to
  read as follows:
  
    1.45 Joint inventors.
   *  *  *  *  *
    (c) If multiple inventors are named in an application,
  >other than a provisional application under   1.53(b)(2),<
  each named inventor must have made a contribution,
  individually or jointly, to the subject matter of at least
  one claim of the application and the application will be
  considered to be a joint application under 35 U.S.C. 116.
  >If multiple inventors are named in a provisional
  application, each named inventor must have made a
  contribution, individually or jointly, to the subject matter
  disclosed in the provisional application and the provisional
  
  application will be considered to be a joint application
  under 35 U.S.C. 116.<
    
  11.  Section 1.48 is proposed to be revised to read as
  follows:
  
    1.48 Correction of inventorship.
    (a) If the correct inventor or inventors are not named in
  an application for patent >,other than a provisional
  application,< through error without any deceptive intention
  on the part of the actual inventor or inventors, the
  application may be amended to name only the actual inventor
  or inventors.  Such amendment must be diligently made and
  must be accompanied by:
     (1) a petition including a statement of facts verified by
  the original named inventor or inventors establishing when
  the error without deceptive intention was discovered and how
  it occurred;
     (2) an oath or declaration by each actual inventor or
  inventors as required by   1.63;
     (3) the fee set forth in   1.17(h); and
     (4) the written consent of any assignee.  When the
  application is involved in an interference, the petition
  shall comply with the requirements of this section and shall
  be accompanied by a motion under   1.634.
    (b) If the correct inventors are named in the application
  >,other than a provisional application,< when filed and the
  prosecution of the application results in the amendment or
  cancellation of claims so that less than all of the
  originally named inventors are the actual inventors of the
  invention being claimed in the application, an amendment
  shall be filed deleting the names of the person or persons
  who are not inventors of the invention being claimed.  The
  amendment must be diligently made and shall be accompanied
  by:
     (1) A petition including a statement identifying each
  named inventor who is being deleted and acknowledging that
  the inventor's invention is no longer being claimed in the
  application, and
     (2) The fee set forth in   1.17(h).
     (c) If an application >other than a provisional
  application< discloses unclaimed subject matter by an
  inventor or inventors not named in the application, the
  application may be amended pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
  section to add claims to the subject matter and name the
  correct inventors for the application.
    >(d) If the name or names of an inventor or inventors were
  omitted in a provisional application for patent filed under 
    1.53(b)(2) through error without any deceptive intention
  
  on the part of the actual inventor or inventors, the
  provisional application may be amended to add the name or
  names of the actual inventor or inventors.  Such amendment
  must be accompanied by:
     (1) a petition including a statement that the error
  occurred without deceptive intention on the part of the
  actual inventor or inventors, which statement must be a
  verified statement if made by a person not registered to
  practice before the Patent and Trademark Office; and
     (2) the fee set forth in   1.17(q).<
                       
  12.  Section 1.51 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
  
    1.51 General requisites of an application.
    (a) Applications for patents must be made to the
  Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks.
     >(1)< A complete application >filed under   1.53(b)(1)<
  comprises:   
    >(i)<[(1)] A specification, including a claim or
  claims, see    1.71 to 1.77[.]>;<
         >(ii)<[(2)] An oath or declaration, see    1.63 and
  1.68[.]>;<
         >(iii)<[(3)] Drawings, when necessary, see    1.81 to
  >1.85<[1.88.]>; and<
         >(iv)<[(4)] The prescribed filing fee, see   1.16.
     >(2) A complete provisional application filed under
    1.53(b)(2) comprises:
      (i) A cover sheet identifying:
       (A) The application as a provisional application,
       (B) The name or names of the inventor or inventors,
  (see   1.41),
       (C) The title of the invention,
       (D) The name and registration number of the attorney or
  agent (if applicable),
       (E) The docket number used by the person filing the
  application to identify the application (if applicable), and 
      (F) The correspondence address;
      (ii) A specification as prescribed by 35 U.S.C. 112,
  first paragraph, see   1.71;
      (iii) Drawings, when necessary, see    1.81 to 1.85; and
       (iv) The prescribed filing fee, see   1.16.<
    (b) Applicants are encouraged to file an information
  disclosure statement >in national applications other than
  provisional applications.<  See    1.97 and 1.98.  >No
  information disclosure statement may be filed in a
  provisional application filed under   1.53(b)(2).<
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  
  13.  Section 1.53 paragraphs (a) - (e) are proposed to be
  revised to read as follows:
  
    1.53 [Serial] >Application< number, filing date, and
  completion of application.
    (a) Any application for a patent received in the Patent
  and Trademark Office will be assigned >an application< [a
  serial] number for identification purposes.
    (b)>(1)< The filing date of an application for patent
  filed under this section>, except for a provisional
  application,< is the date on which: [(1)] a specification
  containing a description pursuant to   1.71 and at least one
  claim pursuant to   1.75; and [(2)] any drawing required by
    1.81(a), are filed in the Patent and Trademark Office in
  the name of the actual inventor or inventors as required by 
    1.41.  No new matter may be introduced into an application
  after its filing date (  1.118).  If all the names of the
  actual inventor or inventors are not supplied when the
  specification and any required drawing are filed, the
  application will not be given a filing date earlier than the
  date upon which the names are supplied unless a petition
  with the fee set forth in   1.17(i)[(1)] is filed which sets
  forth the reasons the delay in supplying the names should be
  excused.  A continuation>,< [or] divisional >or
  continuation-in-part< application (filed under the
  conditions specified in 35 U.S.C. 120 or 121 and   1.78(a))
  may be filed >under< [pursuant to] this section[,   1.60] or
    1.62. [A continuation-in-part application may be filed
  pursuant to this section or   1.62.]   
       >(2) The filing date of a provisional application is
  the date on which:  a specification as prescribed by
  35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph; and any drawing required by
    1.81(a), are filed in the Patent and Trademark Office in
  the name of the actual inventor or inventors as required by
    1.41.  No amendment, other than to make the provisional
  application comply with all applicable regulations, may be
  made to the provisional application after the filing date of
  the provisional application.  If all the names of the actual
  inventor or inventors are not supplied when the
  specification and any required drawing are filed, the
  provisional application will not be given a filing date
  earlier than the date upon which the names are  supplied
  unless a petition with the fee set forth in   1.17(q) is
  filed which sets forth the reasons the delay in supplying
  the names should be excused.
        (i) A provisional application must also include a
  cover sheet identifying the application as a provisional
  application.  Otherwise, the application will be treated as
  an application filed under   1.53(b)(1).
        (ii) An application for patent filed under
    1.53(b)(1) may be treated as a provisional application and
  be accorded the original filing date provided that a
  petition requesting the conversion, with the fee set forth
  in   1.17(q), is filed prior to the earlier of either the
  payment of the issue fee or the expiration of 12 months
  after the filing date of the provisional application.  The
  grant of any such petition will not entitle applicant to a
  refund of the fees which were properly paid in the
  application filed under   1.53(b)(1).
        (iii) A provisional application shall not be entitled
  to the right of priority under   1.55 or 35 U.S.C. 119 or
  365(a) or to the benefit of an earlier filing date under
    1.78 or 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 or 365(c) of any other
  application.  No claim for priority under   1.78(a)(3) may
  be made in a design application based on a provisional
  application.  No request under   1.293 for a statutory
  invention registration may be filed in a provisional
  application.  The requirements of   1.821(e) regarding
  sequence listings in computer readable form are not
  applicable to a provisional application.<
    (c) If any application is filed without the specification,
  drawing or name, or names, of the actual inventor or
  inventors required by paragraph (b)>(1) or (b)(2)< of this
  section, applicant will be so notified and given a time
  period within which to submit the omitted specification,
  drawing, name, or names, of the actual inventor, or
  inventors, in order to obtain a filing date as of the date
  of filing of such submission.  A copy of the "Notice of
  Incomplete Application" form notifying the applicant should
  accompany any response thereto submitted to the Office.  If
  the omission is not corrected within the time period set,
  the application will be returned or otherwise disposed of;
  the fee, if submitted, will be refunded less the handling
  fee set forth in   1.21(n).  >Any request for review of a
  refusal to accord an application a filing date must be by
  way of a petition accompanied by the fee set forth in
    1.17(i), if the application was filed under   1.53(b)(1),
  or by the fee set forth in   1.17(q), if the application was
  filed under   1.53(b)(2).<
    (d)>(1)< If an application which has been accorded a
  filing date pursuant to paragraph (b)>(1)< of this section
  does not include the appropriate filing fee or an oath or 
  declaration by the applicant, applicant will be so notified,
  if a correspondence address has been provided and given a
  period of time within which to file the fee, oath, or
  declaration and to pay the surcharge as set forth in
    1.16(e) in order to prevent abandonment of the
  application.  A copy of the "Notice to File Missing Parts"
  form mailed to applicant should accompany any response
  thereto submitted to the Office.  If the required filing fee
  is not timely paid, [or if the processing and retention fee
  set forth in   1.21(l) is not paid within one year of the
  date of mailing of the notification required by this
  paragraph,] the application will be disposed of.  No copies
  will be provided or certified by the Office of an
  application which has been disposed of or in which [neither]
  the required basic filing fee [nor the processing and
  retention fee] has >not< been paid.  The notification
  pursuant to this paragraph may be made simultaneously with
  any notification pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section.
  If no correspondence address is included in the application,
  applicant has two months from the filing date to file the
  basic filing fee, oath or declaration and to pay the
  surcharge as set forth in   1.16(e) in order to prevent
  abandonment of the application[; or, if no basic filing fee
  has been paid, one year from the filing date to pay the
  processing and retention fee set forth in   1.21(l) to
  prevent disposal of the application].
       >(2) If a provisional application which has been
  accorded a filing date pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this
  section does not include the appropriate filing fee or the
  cover sheet required by   1.51(a)(2), applicant will be so
  notified if a correspondence address has been provided and
  given a period of time within which to file the fee, cover
  sheet and to pay the surcharge as set forth in   1.16(l) in
  order to prevent abandonment of the application.  A copy of
  the "Notice to File Missing Parts" form mailed to applicant
  should accompany any response thereto submitted to the
  Office.  If the required filing fee is not timely paid, the
  application will be disposed of.  No copies will be provided
  or certified by the Office of an application which has been
  disposed of or in which the required basic filing fee has
  not been paid.  The notification pursuant to this paragraph
  may be made simultaneously with any notification pursuant to
  paragraph (c) of this section.  If no correspondence address
  is included in the application, applicant has two months
  from the filing date to file the basic filing fee, cover
  sheet and to pay the surcharge as set forth in   1.16(l) in
  order to prevent abandonment of the application.<
    (e)>(1)< An application for a patent >filed under
  paragraph (b)(1) of this section< will not be placed upon
  the files for examination until all its required parts,
  complying with the rules relating thereto, are received,
  except that certain minor informalities may be waived 
  subject to subsequent correction whenever required.
       >(2) A provisional application for a patent filed under
  paragraph (b)(2) of this section will not be placed upon the
  files for examination and will become abandoned no later
  
  
  than twelve months after its filing date pursuant to
  35 U.S.C. 111(b)(1).<
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  14.  Section 1.55 is proposed to be revised to read as
  follows:
  
    1.55 Claim for foreign priority.
    (a) An applicant >in an application other than a
  provisional application< may claim the benefit of the filing
  date of a prior foreign application under the conditions
  specified in 35 U.S.C. 119>(a) - (d)< and 172.  The claim to
  priority need be in no special form and may be made by the
  attorney or agent if the foreign application is referred to
  in the oath or declaration as required by   1.63.  The claim
  for priority and the certified copy of the foreign
  application specified in [the second paragraph of]
  35 U.S.C. 119>(b)< must be filed:
         (1) in the case of an interference (  1.630);
         (2) when necessary to overcome the date of a
  reference relied upon by the examiner;
         (3) when specifically required by the examiner;
  and
         (4) in all other cases, before the patent is
  granted.  If the claim for priority or the certified copy of
  the foreign application is filed after the date the issue
  fee is paid, it must be accompanied by a petition requesting
  entry and by the fee set forth in   1.17(i)[(1)].  If the
  certified copy filed is not in the English language, a
  translation need not be filed except in the case of
  interference; or when necessary to overcome the date of a
  reference relied upon by the examiner; or when specifically
  required by the examiner, in which event an English language
  translation must be filed together with a statement that the
  translation of the certified copy is accurate.  The
  statement must be a verified statement if made by a person
  not registered to practice before the Patent and Trademark
  Office.
    (b) An applicant may under certain circumstances claim
  priority on the basis of an application for an inventor's
  certificate in a country granting both inventor's
  certificates and patents.  When an applicant wishes to claim
  the right of priority as to a claim or claims of the
  application on the basis of an application for an inventor's
  certificate in such a country under 35 U.S.C. 119>(d)<, 
  [last paragraph (as amended July 28, 1972),] the applicant
  or his or her attorney or agent, when submitting a claim for
  such right as specified in paragraph (a) of this section,
  shall include an affidavit or declaration including a
  
  specific statement that, upon an investigation, he or she
  has satisfied himself or herself that to the best of his or
  her knowledge the applicant, when filing his or her
  application for the inventor's certificate, had the option
  to file an application either for a patent or an inventor's
  certificate as to the subject matter of the identified claim
  or claims forming the basis for the claim of priority.
  
  15.  Section 1.59 is proposed to be revised to read as
  follows:
  
    1.59 Papers of application with filing date not to be
  returned.
    Papers in an application which has received a filing
  date pursuant to   1.53 will not be returned for any purpose
  whatever.  If applicants have not preserved copies of the
  papers, the Office will furnish copies at the usual cost of
  any application in which [either] the required basic filing
  fee (  1.16) [or the processing and retention fee
    1.21(l))] has been paid.  See   1.618 for return of
  unauthorized and improper papers in interferences.
  
  
  
  
  16.  Section 1.60 is proposed to be removed and reserved.
  
    1.60 >[Reserved]< [Continuation or divisional application
  for invention disclosed in a prior application.]
    
  17.  Section 1.62 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraphs (a) and (e) to read as follows:
  
    1.62 File wrapper continuing procedure.
  (a) A continuation, continuation-in-part, or divisional
  application, which uses the specification, drawings and oath
  or declaration from a prior complete application
  [(  1.51(a))]>as defined by   1.51(a)(1) (not a prior
  complete provisional application as defined by
    1.51(a)(2)), and< which is to be abandoned, may be filed
  >under this section< before the payment of the issue fee,
  abandonment of, or termination of proceedings on the prior
  application.  The filing date of an application filed under
  this section is the date on which a request is filed for an
  application under this section including identification of
  the [Serial Number, filing date,]>application number< and 
  applicant's name of the prior complete application.  If the
  continuation, continuation-in-part, or divisional
  application is filed by less than all the inventors named in
  the prior application a statement must accompany the
  application when filed requesting deletion of the names of
  the person or persons who are not inventors of the invention
  being claimed in the continuation, continuation-in-part, or
  divisional application.
  * * * * *
  (e) An application filed under this section will utilize the
  file wrapper and contents of the prior application to
  constitute the new continuation, continuation-in-part, or
  divisional application but will be assigned a new
  application [serial] number.  Changes to the prior
  application must be made in the form of an amendment to the
  prior application as it exists at the time of filing the
  application under this section.  No copy of the prior
  application or new specification is required.  The filing of
  such a copy or specification will be considered improper,
  and a filing date as of the date of deposit of the request
  for an application under this section will not be granted to
  the application unless a petition with the fee set forth in
    1.17(i)[(1)] is filed with instructions to cancel the copy
  or specification.
  * * * * *
  
  18.  Section 1.63 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (a) to read as follows:
  
    1.63 Oath or declaration.
    (a) An oath or declaration filed under
    1.51(a)[(2)]>(1)(ii)< as a part of an application must:
  (1) Be executed in accordance with either   1.66 or   1.68;
  (2) Identify the specification to which it is directed;
  (3) Identify each inventor and the residence and country of
  citizenship of each inventor; and
  (4) State whether the inventor is a sole or joint inventor
  of the invention claimed.
  * * * * *
  
  19.  Section 1.67 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (b) to read as follows:
  
    1.67 Supplemental oath or declaration.
  * * * * *
  (b) A supplemental oath or declaration meeting the
  requirements of   1.63 must be filed:  (1) When a claim is
  presented for matter originally shown or described but not
  substantially embraced in the statement of invention or
  claims originally presented; and (2) When an oath or
  declaration submitted in accordance with   1.53(d)>(1)< 
  after the filing of the specification and any required
  drawings specifically and improperly refers to an amendment
  which includes new matter.  No new matter may be introduced
  into an application after its filing date even if a
  supplemental oath or declaration is filed[(  1.53(b);
    1.118)].  In proper cases the oath or declaration here
  required may be made on information and belief by an
  applicant other than inventor.
  * * * * *
  
  20.  Section 1.78 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) and by adding new paragraphs
  (a)(3) and (a)(4) to read as follows:
  
    1.78 Claiming benefit of earlier filing date and cross-
  references to other applications.
  (a)(1) An application >other than a provisional application<
  may claim an invention disclosed in a prior filed copending
  national application >filed under   1.53(b)(1) or   1.62
  (not a provisional application (see paragraph (a)(3) of this
  section))< or international application designating the
  United States of America.  In order for an application to
  claim the benefit of a prior filed copending national
  application, the prior application must name as an inventor
  at least one inventor named in the later filed application
  and disclose the named inventor's invention claimed in at
  least one claim of the later filed application in the manner
  provided by the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112.  In
  addition, the prior application must be
    (i) complete as set forth in   1.51(a)(1); or
    (ii) entitled to a filing date as set forth in
    1.53(b)>(1) or   1.62< and include the basic filing fee
  set forth in   1.16[; or]
    [(iii) entitled to a filing date as set forth in
    1.53(b) and have paid therein the processing and retention
  fee set forth in   1.21(l) within the time period set forth
  in   1.53(d)].
  (2) Any application claiming the benefit of a prior filed
  copending national or international application >other than
  a provisional application< must contain or be amended to
  contain in the first sentence of the specification following
  the title a reference to such prior application, identifying
  it by application number (consisting of the series code and
  serial number)[, or serial number and filing date] or
  international application number and international filing
  date and indicating the relationship of the applications.
  Cross-references to other related applications may be made
  when appropriate. (See   1.14(b).)
  >(3) An application other than for a design patent may claim
  an invention disclosed in a prior filed copending
  provisional application filed under   1.53(b)(2).  A
  provisional application can be pending for no more than
  twelve months.  In order for an  application to claim the
  benefit of a prior filed copending provisional application,
  the prior provisional application must name as an inventor
  at least one inventor named in the later filed application
  and disclose the named inventor's invention claimed in at
  least one claim of the later filed application in the manner
  provided by the first paragraph of 35 U.S.C. 112.  In
  addition, the prior provisional application must be
    (i) complete as set forth in   1.51(a)(2); or
    (ii) entitled to a filing date as set forth in
    1.53(b)(2) and include the basic filing fee set forth in
    1.16(k).
  (4) Any application claiming the benefit of a prior filed
  copending provisional application must contain or be amended
  to contain in the first sentence of the specification
  following the title a reference to such prior provisional
  application, identifying it as a provisional application,
  and including the provisional application number (consisting
  of series code and serial number) and indicating the
  relationship of the applications.<
  * * * * *
  
  21.  Section 1.83 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraphs (a) and (c) to read as follows:
  
  
    1.83 Content of drawing.
    (a)>(1)< The drawing >in an application other than a
  provisional application< must show every feature of the
  invention specified in the claims.  However, conventional
  features disclosed in the description and claims, where
  their detailed illustration is not essential for a proper
  understanding of the invention, should be illustrated in the
  drawing in the form of a graphical drawing symbol or a
  labeled representation (e.g. a labeled rectangular box).
    >(2) The drawing in a provisional application filed
  under   1.53(b)(2) must show every feature of the invention
  disclosed in the description where necessary to understand
  the subject matter of that invention.  However, conventional
  features disclosed in the description, where their detailed
  illustration is not essential for a proper understanding of
  the invention, should be illustrated in the drawing in the
  form of a graphical drawing symbol or a labeled
  representation (e.g. a labeled rectangular box).<
  * * * * *
    (c) Where the drawings do not comply with the
  requirements of paragraphs (a)>(1)< and (b) of this section,
   the examiner shall require such additional illustration
  within a time period of not less than two months from the
  date of the sending of a notice thereof.  Such corrections
  are subject to the requirements of   1.81(d).
   22.  Section 1.97 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (d) to read as follows:
  
    1.97 Filing of information disclosure statement.
  *  *  *  *  * 
    (d) An information disclosure statement shall be
  considered by the Office if filed after the mailing date of
  either:
     (1) A final action under   1.113 or
     (2) A notice of allowance under   1.311,
  whichever occurs first, but before payment of the issue fee,
  provided the statement is accompanied by:
      (i) A certification as specified in paragraph (e) of
  this section,
      (ii) A petition requesting consideration of the
  information disclosure statement, and
      (iii) The petition fee set forth in   1.17(i)[(1)].
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  23.  Section 1.101 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (a) to read as follows:
  
    1.101 Order of examination.
     (a) Applications filed in the Patent and Trademark
  Office and accepted as complete applications>, except for
  provisional applications filed under   1.53(b)(2) which are
  not examined,< are assigned for examination to the
  respective examining groups having the classes of inventions
  to which the applications relate.  Applications shall be
  taken up for examination by the examiner to whom they have
  been assigned in the order in which they have been filed
  except for those applications in which examination has been
  advanced pursuant to   1.102. See   1.496 for order of
  examination of International applications in the national
  stage.
  * * * * *
  
  24.  Section 1.102 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (d) to read as follows:
  
    1.102 Advancement of examination.
  *  *  *  *  *    
    (d) A petition to make an application special on
  grounds other than those referred to in paragraph (c) of
  this section must be accompanied by the petition fee set
  forth in  1.17(i)[(2)].
  
  25.  Section 1.103 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (a) to read as follows:
   
    1.103 Suspension of action.
    (a) Suspension of action by the Office will be granted
  for good and sufficient cause and for a reasonable time
  specified upon petition by the applicant and, if such cause
  is not the fault of the Office, the payment of the fee set
  forth in   1.17(i)[(1)].  Action will not be suspended when
  a response by the applicant to an Office action is required.
  *  *  *  *  *
  
  26. A new, undesignated center heading and new section 1.129
  are proposed to be added to Subpart B-National Processing
  Provisions to read as follows:
  
  >TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS
                                        1.129 Transitional procedures for limited examination
  after final rejection and restriction practice.
  (a) An applicant in an application, other than for reissue
  or a design patent, that has been pending for at least two
  years as of the effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2),
  taking into account any reference made in such application
  to any earlier filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121
  and 365(c), is entitled to have a first submission entered
  and considered on the merits after final rejection under the
  following circumstances:  The Office will consider such a
  submission, to the extent that it would have been entered
  and considered if made prior to final rejection, if the
  first submission is filed prior to or simultaneously with
  the filing of a notice of appeal and prior to abandonment of
  the application and the fee set forth in   1.17(r) is paid
  within one month of any written notification from the Office
  refusing entry of the first submission and prior to
  abandonment of the application.  If a subsequent final
  rejection is made in the application, applicant is entitled
  to have a second submission entered and considered on the
  merits after the subsequent final rejection under the
  following circumstances:  The Office will consider such a
  submission, to the extent that it would have been entered
  and considered if made prior to final rejection, if the
  second submission is filed prior to or simultaneously with
  the filing of a notice of appeal of the subsequent final
  rejection and prior to abandonment of the application and a
  second fee set forth in   1.17(r) is paid within one month
  of any written notification from the Office refusing entry
  of the second submission and prior to abandonment of the
  application.  Any submission filed after a final rejection
  made in an application subsequent to the fee set forth in
    1.17(r) having been twice paid will be treated as set
  forth in   1.116.  A submission as used in this paragraph
  includes, but is not limited to, an information disclosure
  statement, an amendment to the written description, claims 
  or drawings and a new substantive argument or new evidence
  in support of patentability.
  (b)(1) In an application, other than for reissue or a design
  patent, that has been pending for at least three years as of
  the effective date of 35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2), taking into
  account any reference made in the application to any earlier
  filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121 and 365(c), no
  requirement for restriction or for the filing of divisional
  applications shall be made or maintained in the application
  after the effective date, except where:
         (i) the requirement was first made in the application
  or any earlier filed application under 35 U.S.C. 120, 121
  and 365(c) more than two months prior to the effective date; 
      (ii) the examiner has not issued any Office action in
  the application due to actions by the applicant; or
         (iii) the required fee for examination of each
  additional invention was not paid.
    (2)If the application contains more than one independent
  and  distinct invention and a requirement for restriction or
  for the filing of divisional applications cannot be made or
  is withdrawn pursuant to this paragraph, applicant will be
  so notified and given a time period of one month from the
  notice to pay the fee set forth in   1.17(s) for each
  independent and distinct invention claimed in the
  application in excess of one.  If applicant does not pay the
  required fee for each additional invention in a timely
  manner, only the first claimed invention and those
  additional inventions for which the fee has been paid will
  be searched and examined.  The additional inventions for
  which the required fee has not been paid will be withdrawn
  from consideration under   1.142(b). An applicant who
  desires examination of an invention so withdrawn from
  consideration can file a divisional application under
  35 U.S.C. 121.
  (c) The provisions of this section shall not be applicable
  to any application filed on or after the effective date of
  35 U.S.C. 154(a)(2).<  
  
  27.  Section 1.139 is proposed to be added to read as
  follows:
  
  >  1.139 Revival of provisional application.
    (a) A provisional application which has been accorded a
  filing date and abandoned for failure to timely respond to
  an Office requirement may be revived so as to be pending for
  a period of no longer than twelve months from its filing
  date if it is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioner
  that the delay was unavoidable.  Under no circumstances will
  the provisional application be pending after twelve months
  from its filing date.  A petition to revive an abandoned
  provisional application must be promptly filed after the
  applicant is notified of, or otherwise becomes aware of, the
   abandonment, and must be accompanied by:
         (1) the required response unless it has been
  previously filed;
         (2) the petition fee as set forth in   1.17(l);
  and
         (3) a showing that the delay was unavoidable.  The
  showing must be a verified showing if made by a person not
  registered to practice before the Patent and Trademark
  Office.
    (b) A provisional application which has been accorded a
  filing date and abandoned for failure to timely respond to
  an Office requirement may be revived so as to be pending for
  a period of no longer than twelve months from its filing
  date if the delay was unintentional.  Under no circumstances
  will the provisional application be pending after twelve
  months from its filing date.  A petition to revive an
  abandoned provisional application must be:
         (1) accompanied by the required response unless it
  has been previously filed;
         (2) accompanied by the petition fee as set forth
  in   1.17(m);
         (3) accompanied by a statement that the delay was
  unintentional.  The statement must be a verified statement
  if made by a person not registered to practice before the
  Patent and Trademark Office.  The Commissioner may require
  additional information where there is a question whether the
  delay was unintentional; and
         (4) filed either:
          (i) within one year of the date on which the
  provisional application became abandoned; or
          (ii) within three months of the date of the first
  decision on a petition to revive under paragraph (a) of this
  section which was filed within one year of the date on which
  the provisional application became abandoned.
    (c) Any request for reconsideration or review of a
  decision refusing to revive a provisional application upon
  petition filed pursuant to paragraphs (a) or (b) of this
  section, to be considered timely, must be filed within two
  months of the decision refusing to revive or within such
  time as set in the decision.
    (d) The time periods set forth in this section cannot
  be extended, except that the three-month period set forth in
  paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section and the time period set
  forth in paragraph (c) of this section may be extended under
  the provisions of   1.136.<
  
  28.  Section 1.177 is proposed to be revised to read as
  follows:
    1.177 Reissue in divisions.
    The Commissioner may, in his or her discretion, cause
  several patents to be issued for distinct and separate parts
  of the thing patented, upon demand of the applicant, and 
  upon payment of the required fee for each division.  Each
  division of a reissue constitutes the subject of a separate
  specification descriptive of the part or parts of the
  invention claimed in such division; and the drawing may
  represent only such part or parts, subject to the provisions
  of    1.83 and 1.84.  On filing divisional reissue
  applications, they shall be referred to the Commissioner.
  Unless otherwise ordered by the Commissioner upon petition
  and payment of the fee set forth in   1.17(i)[(1)], all the
  divisions of a reissue will issue simultaneously; if there
  be any controversy as to one division, the others will be
  withheld from issue until the controversy is ended, unless
  the Commissioner shall otherwise order.
  
  29.  Section 1.312 is proposed to be amended by revising
  paragraph (b) to read as follows:
  
    1.312 Amendments after allowance.
  *  *  *  *  * 
    (b) Any amendment pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
  section filed after the date the issue fee is paid must be
  accompanied by a petition including the fee set forth in
    1.17(i)[(1)] and a
  

Last Modified: March 1995