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  <FDSYS>
    <CFRTITLE>37</CFRTITLE>
    <CFRTITLETEXT>Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights</CFRTITLETEXT>
    <VOL>1</VOL>
    <DATE>2007-07-01</DATE>
    <ORIGINALDATE>2007-07-01</ORIGINALDATE>
    <COVERONLY>false</COVERONLY>
    <TITLE/>
    <GRANULENUM/>
    <ANCESTORS>
      <PARENT HEADING="Title 37" SEQ="1">Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights</PARENT>
      <PARENT HEADING="CHAPTER I" SEQ="0">UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE</PARENT>
    </ANCESTORS>
  </FDSYS>
  <SUBCHAP TYPE="P">
    <PRTPAGE P="334"/>
    <HD SOURCE="HED"/>
    <TEXT>
      <HD SOURCE="HED1">
        <E T="03">PRACTICE BEFORE THE PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE</E>
      </HD>
    </TEXT>
    <PART>
      <EAR>Pt. 10</EAR>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">PART 10—REPRESENTATION OF OTHERS BEFORE THE PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE</HD>
      <CONTENTS>
        <SECHD>Sec.</SECHD>
        <SECTNO>10.1</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>10.2-10.3</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
        <SECTNO>10.4</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Committee on Discipline.</SUBJECT>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Individuals Entitled To Practice Before the Patent and Trademark Office</HD>
          <SECTNO>10.5-10.10</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.11</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Removing names from the register.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.12-10.13</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.14</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Individuals who may practice before the Office in trademark and other non-patent cases.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.15</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refusal to recognize a practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.16-10.17</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.18</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Signature and certificate for correspondence filed in the Patent and Trademark Office.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.19</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Patent and Trademark Office Code of Professional Responsibility</HD>
          <SECTNO>10.20</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canons and Disciplinary Rules.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.21</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 1.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.22</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Maintaining integrity and competence of the legal profession.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.23</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Misconduct.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.24</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disclosure of information to authorities.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.25-10.29</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.30</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 2.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.31</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Communications concerning a practitioner's services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.32</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Advertising.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.33</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Direct contact with prospective clients.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.34</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Communication of fields of practice.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.35</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Firm names and letterheads.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.36</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Fees for legal services.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.37</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Division of fees among practitioners.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.38</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Agreements restricting the practice of a practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.39</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Acceptance of employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.40</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Withdrawal from employment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.41-10.45</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.46</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 3.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.47</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Aiding unauthorized practice of law.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.48</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Sharing legal fees.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.49</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Forming a partnership with a non-practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.50-10.55</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.56</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 4.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.57</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Preservation of confidences and secrets of a client.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.58-10.60</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.61</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 5.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.62</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refusing employment when the interest of the practitioner may impair the practitioner's independent professional judgment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.63</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Withdrawal when the practitioner becomes a witness.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.64</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Avoiding acquisition of interest in litigation or proceeding before the Office.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.65</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limiting business relations with a client.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.66</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refusing to accept or continue employment if the interests of another client may impair the independent professional judgment of the practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.67</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Settling similar claims of clients.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.68</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Avoiding influence by others than the client.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.69-10.75</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.76</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 6.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.77</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Failing to act competently.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.78</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limiting liability to client.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.79-10.82</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.83</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 7.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.84</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Representing a client zealously.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.85</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Representing a client within the bounds of the law.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.86</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.87</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Communicating with one of adverse interest.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.88</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Threatening criminal prosecution.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.89</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conduct in proceedings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.90-10.91</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.92</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contact with witnesses.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.93</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contact with officials.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.94-10.99</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.100</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 8.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action as a public official.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statements concerning officials.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.103</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Practitioner candidate for judicial office.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.104-10.109</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 9.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.111</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Avoiding even the appearance of impropriety.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.112</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Preserving identity of funds and property of client.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.113-10.129</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Investigations and Disciplinary Proceedings</HD>
          <SECTNO>10.130</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reprimand, suspension or exclusion.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.131</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Investigations.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.132</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Initiating a disciplinary proceeding; reference to an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.133</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conference between Director and practitioner; resignation.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.134</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.135</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Service of complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.136</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Answer to complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.137</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Supplemental complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.138</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contested case.<PRTPAGE P="335"/>
          </SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.139</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative law judge; appointment; responsibilities; review of interlocutory orders; stays.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.140</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Representative for Director or respondent.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.141</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing of papers.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.142</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Service of papers.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.143</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Motions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.144</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Hearings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.145</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Proof; variance; amendment of pleadings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.146-10.148</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.149</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Burden of proof.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.150</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.151</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Depositions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.152</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Discovery.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.153</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Proposed findings and conclusions; post-hearing memorandum.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.154</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Initial decision of administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.155</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeal to the Commissioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.156</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decision of the Commissioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.157</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Review of Commissioner's final decision.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.158</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Suspended or excluded practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.159</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of suspension or exclusion.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.160</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Petition for reinstatement.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.161</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Savings clause.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.162-10.169</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>10.170</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Suspension of rules.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </CONTENTS>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>5 U.S.C. 500, 15 U.S.C. 1123; 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2), 31, 32, 41.</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 10.1</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
        <P>This part governs solely the practice of patent, trademark, and other law before the Patent and Trademark Office. Nothing in this part shall be construed to preempt the authority of each State to regulate the practice of law, except to the extent necessary for the Patent and Trademark Office to accomplish its Federal objectives. Unless otherwise clear from the context, the following definitions apply to this part:</P>
        <P>(a) <E T="03">Affidavit</E> means affidavit, declaration under 35 U.S.C. 25 (see §§ 1.68 and 2.20 of this subchapter), or statutory declaration under 28 U.S.C. 1746.</P>
        <P>(b) <E T="03">Application</E> includes an application for a design, plant, or utility patent, an application to reissue any patent, and an application to register a trademark.</P>
        <P>(c) <E T="03">Attorney</E> or <E T="03">lawyer</E> means an individual who is a member in good standing of the bar of any United States court or the highest court of any State. A “non-lawyer” is a person who is not an attorney or lawyer.</P>
        <P>(d) <E T="03">Canon</E> is defined in § 10.20(a).</P>
        <P>(e) <E T="03">Confidence</E> is defined in § 10.57(a).</P>
        <P>(f) <E T="03">Differing interests</E> include every interest that may adversely affect either the judgment or the loyalty of a practitioner to a client, whether it be a conflicting, inconsistent, diverse, or other interest.</P>
        <P>(g) <E T="03">Director</E> means the Director of Enrollment and Discipline.</P>
        <P>(h) <E T="03">Disciplinary Rule</E> is defined in § 10.20(b).</P>
        <P>(i) <E T="03">Employee of a tribunal</E> includes all employees of courts, the Office, and other adjudicatory bodies.</P>
        <P>(j) <E T="03">Giving information</E> within the meaning of § 10.23(c)(2) includes making (1) a written statement or representation or (2) an oral statement or representation.</P>
        <P>(k) <E T="03">Law firm</E> includes a professional legal corporation or a partnership.</P>
        <P>(l) <E T="03">Legal counsel</E> means practitioner.</P>
        <P>(m) <E T="03">Legal profession</E> includes the individuals who are lawfully engaged in practice of patent, trademark, and other law before the Office.</P>
        <P>(n) <E T="03">Legal service</E> means any legal service which may lawfully be performed by a practitioner before the Office.</P>
        <P>(o) <E T="03">Legal System</E> includes the Office and courts and adjudicatory bodies which review matters on which the Office has acted.</P>
        <P>(p) <E T="03">Office</E> means Patent and Trademark Office.</P>
        <P>(q) <E T="03">Person</E> includes a corporation, an association, a trust, a partnership, and any other organization or legal entity.</P>
        <P>(r) <E T="03">Practitioner</E> means (1) an attorney or agent registered to practice before the Office in patent cases or (2) an individual authorized under 5 U.S.C. 500(b) or otherwise as provided by this subchapter, to practice before the Office in trademark cases or other non-patent cases. A “suspended or excluded practitioner” is a practitioner who is suspended or excluded under § 10.156. A “non-practitioner” is an individual who is not a practitioner.</P>
        <P>(s) A <E T="03">proceeding before the Office</E> includes an application, a reexamination, a protest, a public use proceeding, a patent interference, an <E T="03">inter partes</E> trademark proceeding, or any other proceeding which is pending before the Office.<PRTPAGE P="336"/>
        </P>
        <P>(t) <E T="03">Professional legal corporation</E> means a corporation authorized by law to practice law for profit.</P>
        <P>(u) <E T="03">Registration</E> means registration to practice before the Office in patent cases.</P>
        <P>(v) <E T="03">Respondent</E> is defined in § 10.134(a)(1).</P>
        <P>(w) <E T="03">Secret</E> is defined in § 10.57(a).</P>
        <P>(x) <E T="03">Solicit</E> is defined in § 10.33.</P>
        <P>(y) <E T="03">State</E> includes the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and other Federal territories and possessions.</P>
        <P>(z) <E T="03">Tribunal</E> includes courts, the Office, and other adjudicatory bodies.</P>
        <P>(aa) <E T="03">United States</E> means the United States of America, its territories and possessions.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§§ 10.2-10.3</SECTNO>
        <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
      </SECTION>
      <SECTION>
        <SECTNO>§ 10.4</SECTNO>
        <SUBJECT>Committee on Discipline.</SUBJECT>
        <P>(a) The Commissioner shall appoint a Committee on Discipline. The Committee on Discipline shall consist of at least three employees of the Office, none of whom reports directly or indirectly to the Director or the Solicitor. Each member of the Committee on Discipline shall be a member in good standing of the bar of a State.</P>
        <P>(b) The Committee on Discipline shall meet at the request of the Director and after reviewing evidence presented by the Director shall, by majority vote, determine whether there is probable cause to bring charges under § 10.132 against a practitioner. When charges are brought against a practitioner, no member of the Committee on Discipline, employee under the direction of the Director, or associate solicitor or assistant solicitor in the Office of the Solicitor shall participate in rendering a decision on the charges.</P>
        <P>(c) No discovery shall be authorized of, and no member of the Committee on Discipline shall be required to testify about, deliberations of the Committee on Discipline.</P>
      </SECTION>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Individuals Entitled To Practice Before the Patent and Trademark Office</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.5-10.10</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.11</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Removing names from the register.</SUBJECT>

          <P>A letter may be addressed to any individual on the register, at the address of which separate notice was last received by the Director, for the purpose of ascertaining whether such individual desires to remain on the register. The name of any individual failing to reply and give any information requested by the Director within a time limit specified will be removed from the register and the names of individuals so removed will be published in the<E T="03">Official Gazette.</E> The name of any individual so removed may be reinstated on the register as may be appropriate and upon payment of the fee set forth in § 1.21(a)(3) of this subchapter.</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 35452, June 24, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.12-10.13</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.14</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Individuals who may practice before the Office in trademark and other non-patent cases.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Attorneys.</E> Any individual who is an attorney may represent others before the Office in trademark and other non-patent cases. An attorney is not required to apply for registration or recognition to practice before the Office in trademark and other non-patent cases.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Non-lawyers.</E> Individuals who are not attorneys are not recognized to practice before the Office in trademark and other non-patent cases, except that individuals not attorneys who were recognized to practice before the Office in trademark cases under this chapter prior to January 1, 1957, will be recognized as agents to continue practice before the Office in trademark cases.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Foreigners.</E> Any foreign attorney or agent not a resident of the United States who shall prove to the satisfaction of the Director that he or she is registered or in good standing before the patent or trademark office of the country in which he or she resides and practices, may be recognized for the limited purpose of representing parties <PRTPAGE P="337"/>located in such country before the Office in the presentation and prosecution of trademark cases, <E T="03">provided:</E> The patent or trademark office of such country allows substantially reciprocal privileges to those permitted to practice in trademark cases before the United States Patent and Trademark Office. Recognition under this paragraph shall continue only during the period that the conditions specified in this paragraph obtain.</P>
          <P>(d) Recognition of any individual under this section shall not be construed as sanctioning or authorizing the performance of any act regarded in the jurisdiction where performed as the unauthorized practice of law.</P>
          <P>(e) No individual other than those specified in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section will be permitted to practice before the Office in trademark cases. Any individual may appear in a trademark or other non-patent case in his or her own behalf. Any individual may appear in a trademark case for (1) a firm of which he or she is a member or (2) a corporation or association of which he or she is an officer and which he or she is authorized to represent, if such firm, corporation, or association is a party to a trademark proceeding pending before the Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.15</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refusal to recognize a practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Any practitioner authorized to appear before the Office may be suspended or excluded in accordance with the provisions of this part. Any practitioner who is suspended or excluded under this subpart or removed under § 10.11(b) shall not be entitled to practice before the Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.16-10.17</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.18</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Signature and certificate for correspondence filed in the Patent and Trademark Office.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) For all documents filed in the Office in patent, trademark, and other non-patent matters, except for correspondence that is required to be signed by the applicant or party, each piece of correspondence filed by a practitioner in the Patent and Trademark Office must bear a signature by such practitioner complying with the provisions of § 1.4(d), § 1.4(e), or § 2.193(c)(1) of this chapter.</P>
          <P>(b) By presenting to the Office (whether by signing, filing, submitting, or later advocating) any paper, the party presenting such paper, whether a practitioner or non-practitioner, is certifying that—</P>
          <P>(1) All statements made therein of the party's own knowledge are true, all statements made therein on information and belief are believed to be true, and all statements made therein are made with the knowledge that whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of the Patent and Trademark Office, knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact, or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious or fraudulent statement or entry, shall be subject to the penalties set forth under 18 U.S.C. 1001, and that violations of this paragraph may jeopardize the validity of the application or document, or the validity or enforceability of any patent, trademark registration, or certificate resulting therefrom; and</P>
          <P>(2) To the best of the party's knowledge, information and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances, that—</P>
          <P>(i) The paper is not being presented for any improper purpose, such as to harass someone or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of prosecution before the Office;</P>
          <P>(ii) The claims and other legal contentions therein are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law;</P>
          <P>(iii) The allegations and other factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, are likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery; and</P>

          <P>(iv) The denials of factual contentions are warranted on the evidence, or if specifically so identified, are reasonably based on a lack of information or belief.<PRTPAGE P="338"/>
          </P>
          <P>(c) Violations of paragraph (b)(1) of this section by a practitioner or non-practitioner may jeopardize the validity of the application or document, or the validity or enforceability of any patent, trademark registration, or certificate resulting therefrom. Violations of any of paragraphs (b)(2) (i) through (iv) of this section are, after notice and reasonable opportunity to respond, subject to such sanctions as deemed appropriate by the Commissioner, or the Commissioner's designee, which may include, but are not limited to, any combination of—</P>
          <P>(1) Holding certain facts to have been established;</P>
          <P>(2) Returning papers;</P>
          <P>(3) Precluding a party from filing a paper, or presenting or contesting an issue;</P>
          <P>(4) Imposing a monetary sanction;</P>
          <P>(5) Requiring a terminal disclaimer for the period of the delay; or</P>
          <P>(6) Terminating the proceedings in the Patent and Trademark Office.</P>
          <P>(d) Any practitioner violating the provisions of this section may also be subject to disciplinary action. See § 10.23(c)(15).</P>
          <CITA>[62 FR 53206, Oct. 10, 1997, as amended at 69 FR 56546, Sept. 21, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.19</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Patent and Trademark Office Code of Professional Responsibility</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.20</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canons and Disciplinary Rules.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Canons are set out in §§ 10.21, 10.30, 10.46, 10.56, 10.61, 10.76, 10.83, 10.100, and 10.110. Canons are statements of axiomatic norms, expressing in general terms the standards of professional conduct expected of practitioners in their relationships with the public, with the legal system, and with the legal profession.</P>
          <P>(b) Disciplinary Rules are set out in §§ 10.22-10.24, 10.31-10.40, 10.47-10.57, 10.62-10.68, 10.77, 10.78, 10.84, 10.85, 10.87-10.89, 10.92, 10.93, 10.101-10.103, 10.111, and 10.112. Disciplinary Rules are mandatory in character and state the minimum level of conduct below which no practitioner can fall without being subjected to disciplinary action.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.21</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 1.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should assist in maintaining the integrity and competence of the legal profession.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.22</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Maintaining integrity and competence of the legal profession.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner is subject to discipline if the practitioner has made a materially false statement in, or if the practitioner has deliberately failed to disclose a material fact requested in connection with, the practitioner's application for registration or membership in the bar of any United States court or any State court or his or her authority to otherwise practice before the Office in trademark and other non-patent cases.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not further the application for registration or membership in the bar of any United States court, State court, or administrative agency of another person known by the practitioner to be unqualified in respect to character, education, or other relevant attribute.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.23</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Misconduct.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not engage in disreputable or gross misconduct.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not:</P>
          <P>(1) Violate a Disciplinary Rule.</P>
          <P>(2) Circumvent a Disciplinary Rule through actions of another.</P>
          <P>(3) Engage in illegal conduct involving moral turpitude.</P>
          <P>(4) Engage in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.</P>
          <P>(5) Engage in conduct that is prejudicial to the administration of justice.</P>
          <P>(6) Engage in any other conduct that adversely reflects on the practitioner's fitness to practice before the Office.</P>
          <P>(c) Conduct which constitutes a violation of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section includes, but is not limited to:</P>
          <P>(1) Conviction of a criminal offense involving moral turpitude, dishonesty, or breach of trust.</P>
          <P>(2) Knowingly giving false or misleading information or knowingly participating in a material way in giving false or misleading information, to:</P>

          <P>(i) A client in connection with any immediate, prospective, or pending business before the Office.<PRTPAGE P="339"/>
          </P>
          <P>(ii) The Office or any employee of the Office.</P>
          <P>(3) Misappropriation of, or failure to properly or timely remit, funds received by a practitioner or the practitioner's firm from a client to pay a fee which the client is required by law to pay to the Office.</P>
          <P>(4) Directly or indirectly improperly influencing, attempting to improperly influence, offering or agreeing to improperly influence, or attempting to offer or agree to improperly influence an official action of any employee of the Office by:</P>
          <P>(i) Use of threats, false accusations, duress, or coercion,</P>
          <P>(ii) An offer of any special inducement or promise of advantage, or</P>
          <P>(iii) Improperly bestowing of any gift, favor, or thing of value.</P>
          <P>(5) Suspension or disbarment from practice as an attorney or agent on ethical grounds by any duly constituted authority of a State or the United States or, in the case of a practitioner who resides in a foreign country or is registered under § 10.6(c), by any duly constituted authority of:</P>
          <P>(i) A State,</P>
          <P>(ii) The United States, or</P>
          <P>(iii) The country in which the practitioner resides.</P>
          <P>(6) Knowingly aiding or abetting a practitioner suspended or excluded from practice before the Office in engaging in unauthorized practice before the Office under § 10.158.</P>
          <P>(7) Knowingly withholding from the Office information identifying a patent or patent application of another from which one or more claims have been copied. See § 41.202(a)(1) of this title.</P>

          <P>(8) Failing to inform a client or former client or failing to timely notify the Office of an inability to notify a client or former client of correspondence received from the Office or the client's or former client's opponent in an <E T="03">inter partes</E> proceeding before the Office when the correspondence (i) could have a significant effect on a matter pending before the Office, (ii) is received by the practitioner on behalf of a client or former client and (iii) is correspondence of which a reasonable practitioner would believe under the circumstances the client or former client should be notified.</P>
          <P>(9) Knowingly misusing a “Certificate of Mailing or Transmission” under § 1.8 of this chapter.</P>
          <P>(10) Knowingly violating or causing to be violated the requirements of § 1.56 or § 1.555 of this subchapter.</P>
          <P>(11) Except as permitted by § 1.52(c) of this chapter, knowingly filing or causing to be filed an application containing any material alteration made in the application papers after the signing of the accompanying oath or declaration without identifying the alteration at the time of filing the application papers.</P>
          <P>(12) Knowingly filing, or causing to be filed, a frivolous complaint alleging a violation by a practitioner of the Patent and Trademark Office Code of Professional Responsibility.</P>
          <P>(13) Knowingly preparing or prosecuting or providing assistance in the preparation or prosecution of a patent application in violation of an undertaking signed under § 10.10(b).</P>
          <P>(14) Knowingly failing to advise the Director in writing of any change which would preclude continued registration under § 10.6.</P>
          <P>(15) Signing a paper filed in the Office in violation of the provisions of § 10.18 or making a scandalous or indecent statement in a paper filed in the Office.</P>
          <P>(16) Willfully refusing to reveal or report knowledge or evidence to the Director contrary to § 10.24 or paragraph (b) of § 10.131.</P>

          <P>(17) Representing before the Office in a patent case either a joint venture comprising an inventor and an invention developer or an inventor referred to the registered practitioner by an invention developer when (i) the registered practitioner knows, or has been advised by the Office, that a formal complaint filed by a Federal or State agency, based on any violation of any law relating to securities, unfair methods of competition, unfair or deceptive acts or practices, mail fraud, or other civil or criminal conduct, is pending before a Federal or State court or Federal or State agency, or has been resolved unfavorably by such court or agency, against the invention developer in connection with invention development services and (ii) the registered practitioner fails to fully advise the inventor of the existence of the <PRTPAGE P="340"/>pending complaint or unfavorable resolution thereof prior to undertaking or continuing representation of the joint venture or inventor. “Invention developer” means any person, and any agent, employee, officer, partner, or independent contractor thereof, who is not a registered practitioner and who advertises invention development services in media of general circulation or who enters into contracts for invention development services with customers as a result of such advertisement. “Invention development services” means acts of invention development required or promised to be performed, or actually performed, or both, by an invention developer for a customer. “Invention development” means the evaluation, perfection, marketing, brokering, or promotion of an invention on behalf of a customer by an invention developer, including a patent search, preparation of a patent application, or any other act done by an invention developer for consideration toward the end of procuring or attempting to procure a license, buyer, or patent for an invention. “Customer” means any individual who has made an invention and who enters into a contract for invention development services with an invention developer with respect to the invention by which the inventor becomes obligated to pay the invention developer less than $5,000 (not to include any additional sums which the invention developer is to receive as a result of successful development of the invention). “Contract for invention development services” means a contract for invention development services with an invention developer with respect to an invention made by a customer by which the inventor becomes obligated to pay the invention developer less than $5,000 (not to include any additional sums which the invention developer is to receive as a result of successful development of the invention).</P>
          <P>(18) In the absence of information sufficient to establish a reasonable belief that fraud or inequitable conduct has occurred, alleging before a tribunal that anyone has committed a fraud on the Office or engaged in inequitable conduct in a proceeding before the Office.</P>
          <P>(19) Action by an employee of the Office contrary to the provisions set forth in § 10.10(c).</P>
          <P>(20) Knowing practice by a Government employee contrary to applicable Federal conflict of interest laws, or regulations of the Department, agency or commission employing said individual.</P>
          <P>(d) A practitioner who acts with reckless indifference to whether a representation is true or false is chargeable with knowledge of its falsity. Deceitful statements of half-truths or concealment of material facts shall be deemed actual fraud within the meaning of this part.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985; 50 FR 25073, June 17, 1985; 50 FR 25980, June 24, 1985, as amended at 53 FR 38950, Oct. 4, 1988; 53 FR 41278, Oct. 20, 1988; 57 FR 2036, Jan. 17, 1992; 58 FR 54504, Oct. 22, 1993; 61 FR 56448, Nov. 1, 1996; 62 FR 53206, Oct. 10, 1997; 65 FR 54683, Sept. 8, 2000; 69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.24</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Disclosure of information to authorities.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner possessing unprivileged knowledge of a violation of a Disciplinary Rule shall report such knowledge to the Director.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner possessing unprivileged knowledge or evidence concerning another practitioner, employee of the Office, or a judge shall reveal fully such knowledge or evidence upon proper request of a tribunal or other authority empowered to investigate or act upon the conduct of practitioners, employees of the Office, or judges.</P>
          <APPRO>(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 0651-0017)</APPRO>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.25-10.29</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.30</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 2.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should assist the legal profession in fulfilling its duty to make legal counsel available.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.31</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Communications concerning a practitioner's services.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) No practitioner shall with respect to any prospective business before the Office, by word, circular, letter, or advertising, with intent to defraud in any manner, deceive, mislead, or threaten <PRTPAGE P="341"/>any prospective applicant or other person having immediate or prospective business before the Office.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner may not use the name of a Member of either House of Congress or of an individual in the service of the United States in advertising the practitioner's practice before the Office.</P>
          <P>(c) Unless authorized under § 10.14(b), a non-lawyer practitioner shall not hold himself or herself out as authorized to practice before the Office in trademark cases.</P>
          <P>(d) Unless a practitioner is an attorney, the practitioner shall not hold himself or herself out:</P>
          <P>(1) To be an attorney or lawyer or</P>
          <P>(2) As authorized to practice before the Office in non-patent and trademark cases.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.32</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Advertising.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Subject to § 10.31, a practitioner may advertise services through public media, including a telephone directory, legal directory, newspaper, or other periodical, radio, or television, or through written communications not involving solicitation as defined by § 10.33.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not give anything of value to a person for recommending the practitioner's services, except that a practitioner may pay the reasonable cost of advertising or written communication permitted by this section and may pay the usual charges of a not-for-profit lawyer referral service or other legal service organization.</P>
          <P>(c) Any communication made pursuant to this section shall include the name of at least one practitioner responsible for its content.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.33</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Direct contact with prospective clients.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner may not solicit professional employment from a prospective client with whom the practitioner has no family or prior professional relationship, by mail, in-person or otherwise, when a significant motive for the practitioner's doing so is the practitioner's pecuniary gain under circumstances evidencing undue influence, intimidation, or overreaching. The term “solicit” includes contact in person, by telephone or telegraph, by letter or other writing, or by other communication directed to a specific recipient, but does not include letters addressed or advertising circulars distributed generally to persons not specifically known to need legal services of the kind provided by the practitioner in a particular matter, but who are so situated that they might in general find such services useful.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.34</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Communication of fields of practice.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A registered practitioner may state or imply that the practitioner is a specialist as follows:</P>
          <P>(a) A registered practitioner who is an attorney may use the designation “Patents,” “Patent Attorney,” “Patent Lawyer,” “Registered Patent Attorney,” or a substantially similar designation.</P>
          <P>(b) A registered practitioner who is not an attorney may use the designation “Patents,” “Patent Agent,” “Registered Patent Agent,” or a substantially similar designation, except that any practitioner who was registered prior to November 15, 1938, may refer to himself or herself as a “patent attorney.”</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.35</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Firm names and letterheads.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not use a firm name, letterhead, or other professional designation that violates § 10.31. A trade name may be used by a practitioner in private practice if it does not imply a current connection with a government agency or with a public or charitable legal services organization and is not otherwise in violation of § 10.31.</P>
          <P>(b) Practitioners may state or imply that they practice in a partnership or other organization only when that is the fact.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.36</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Fees for legal services.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not enter into an agreement for, charge, or collect an illegal or clearly excessive fee.</P>

          <P>(b) A fee is clearly excessive when, after a review of the facts, a practitioner of ordinary prudence would be left with a definite and firm conviction that the fee is in excess of a reasonable fee. Factors to be considered as guides <PRTPAGE P="342"/>in determining the reasonableness of a fee include the following:</P>
          <P>(1) The time and labor required, the novelty and difficulty of the questions involved, and the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly.</P>
          <P>(2) The likelihood, if apparent to the client, that the acceptance of the particular employment will preclude other employment by the practitioner.</P>
          <P>(3) The fee customarily charged for similar legal services.</P>
          <P>(4) The amount involved and the results obtained.</P>
          <P>(5) The time limitations imposed by the client or by the circumstances.</P>
          <P>(6) The nature and length of the professional relationship with the client.</P>
          <P>(7) The experience, reputation, and ability of the practitioner or practitioners performing the services.</P>
          <P>(8) Whether the fee is fixed or contingent.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.37</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Division of fees among practitioners.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not divide a fee for legal services with another practitioner who is not a partner in or associate of the practitioner's law firm or law office, unless:</P>
          <P>(1) The client consents to employment of the other practitioner after a full disclosure that a division of fees will be made.</P>
          <P>(2) The division is made in proportion to the services performed and responsibility assumed by each.</P>
          <P>(3) The total fee of the practitioners does not clearly exceed reasonable compensation for all legal services rendered to the client.</P>
          <P>(b) This section does not prohibit payment to a former partner or associate pursuant to a separation or retirement agreement.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.38</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Agreements restricting the practice of a practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not be a party to or participate in a partnership or employment agreement with another practitioner that restricts the right of a practitioner to practice before the Office after the termination of a relationship created by the agreement, except as a condition to payment of retirement benefits.</P>
          <P>(b) In connection with the settlement of a controversy or suit, a practitioner shall not enter into an agreement that restricts the practitioner's right to practice before the Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.39</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Acceptance of employment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner shall not accept employment on behalf of a person if the practitioner knows or it is obvious that such person wishes to:</P>
          <P>(a) Bring a legal action, commence a proceeding before the Office, conduct a defense, assert a position in any proceeding pending before the Office, or otherwise have steps taken for the person, merely for the purpose of harassing or maliciously injuring any other person.</P>
          <P>(b) Present a claim or defense in litigation or any proceeding before the Office that is not warranted under existing law, unless it can be supported by good faith argument for an extension, modification, or reversal of existing law.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.40</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Withdrawal from employment,</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not withdraw from employment in a proceeding before the Office without permission from the Office (see §§ 1.36 and 2.19 of this subchapter). In any event, a practitioner shall not withdraw from employment until the practitioner has taken reasonable steps to avoid foreseeable prejudice to the rights of the client, including giving due notice to his or her client, allowing time for employment of another practitioner, delivering to the client all papers and property to which the client is entitled, and complying with applicable laws and rules. A practitioner who withdraws from employment shall refund promptly any part of a fee paid in advance that has not been earned.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Mandatory withdrawal.</E> A practitioner representing a client before the Office shall withdraw from employment if:</P>

          <P>(1) The practitioner knows or it is obvious that the client is bringing a legal action, commencing a proceeding before the Office, conducting a defense, or asserting a position in litigation or any proceeding pending before the Office, or is otherwise having steps taken for the client, merely for the purpose of <PRTPAGE P="343"/>harassing or maliciously injuring any person;</P>
          <P>(2) The practitoner knows or it is obvious that the practitoner's continued employment will result in violation of a Disciplinary Rule;</P>
          <P>(3) The practitioner's mental or physical condition renders it unreasonably difficult for the practitioner to carry out the employment effectively; or</P>
          <P>(4) The practitioner is discharged by the client.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Permissive withdrawal.</E> If paragraph (b) of this section is not applicable, a practitioner may not request permission to withdraw in matters pending before the Office unless such request or such withdrawal is because:</P>
          <P>(1) The petitioner's client:</P>
          <P>(i) Insists upon presenting a claim or defense that is not warranted under existing law and cannot be supported by good faith argument for an extension, modification, or reversal of existing law;</P>
          <P>(ii) Personally seeks to pursue an illegal course of conduct;</P>
          <P>(iii) Insists that the practitioner pursue a course of conduct that is illegal or that is prohibited under a Disciplinary Rule;</P>
          <P>(iv) By other conduct renders it unreasonably difficult for the practitioner to carry out the employment effectively;</P>
          <P>(v) Insists, in a matter not pending before a tribunal, that the practitioner engage in conduct that is contrary to the judgment and advice of the practitioner but not prohibited under the Disciplinary Rule; or</P>
          <P>(vi) Has failed to pay one or more bills rendered by the practitioner for an unreasonable period of time or has failed to honor an agreement to pay a retainer in advance of the performance of legal services.</P>
          <P>(2) The practitioner's continued employment is likely to result in a violation of a Disciplinary Rule;</P>
          <P>(3) The practitioner's inability to work with co-counsel indicates that the best interests of the client likely will be served by withdrawal;</P>
          <P>(4) The practitioner's mental or physical condition renders it difficult for the practitioner to carry out the employment effectively;</P>
          <P>(5) The practitioner's client knowingly and freely assents to termination of the employment; or</P>
          <P>(6) The practitioner believes in good faith, in a proceeding pending before the Office, that the Office will find the existence of other good cause for withdrawal.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.41-10.45</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.46</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 3.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should assist in preventing the unauthorized practice of law.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.47</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Aiding unauthorized practice of law.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not aid a non-practitioner in the unauthorized practice of law before the Office.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not aid a suspended or excluded practitioner in the practice of law before the Office.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner shall not aid a non-lawyer in the unauthorized practice of law.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.48</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Sharing legal fees.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner or a firm of practitioners shall not share legal fees with a non-practitioner except that:</P>
          <P>(a) An agreement by a practitioner with the practitioner's firm, partner, or associate may provide for the payment of money, over a reasonable period of time after the practitioner's death, to the practitioner's estate or to one or more specified persons.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner who undertakes to complete unfinished legal business of a deceased practitioner may pay to the estate of the deceased practitioner that proportion of the total compensation which fairly represents the services rendered by the deceased practitioner.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner or firm of practitioners may include non-practitioner employees in a compensation or retirement plan, even though the plan is based in whole or in part on a profit-sharing arrangement, providing such plan does not circumvent another Disciplinary Rule.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985, as amended at 58 FR 54511, Oct. 22, 1993]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <PRTPAGE P="344"/>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.49</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Forming a partnership with a non-practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner shall not form a partnership with a non-practitioner if any of the activities of the partnership consist of the practice of patent, trademark, or other law before the Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.50-10.55</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.56</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 4.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should preserve the confidences and secrets of a client.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.57</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Preservation of confidences and secrets of a client.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) “Confidence” refers to information protected by the attorney-client or agent-client privilege under applicable law. “Secret” refers to other information gained in the professional relationship that the client has requested be held inviolate or the disclosure of which would be embarrassing or would be likely to be detrimental to the client.</P>
          <P>(b) Except when permitted under paragraph (c) of this section, a practitioner shall not knowingly:</P>
          <P>(1) Reveal a confidence or secret of a client.</P>
          <P>(2) Use a confidence or secret of a client to the disadvantage of the client.</P>
          <P>(3) Use a confidence or secret of a client for the advantage of the practitioner or of a third person, unless the client consents after full disclosure.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner may reveal:</P>
          <P>(1) Confidences or secrets with the consent of the client affected but only after a full disclosure to the client.</P>
          <P>(2) Confidences or secrets when permitted under Disciplinary Rules or required by law or court order.</P>
          <P>(3) The intention of a client to commit a crime and the information necessary to prevent the crime.</P>
          <P>(4) Confidences or secrets necessary to establish or collect the practitioner's fee or to defend the practitioner or the practitioner's employees or associates against an accusation of wrongful conduct.</P>
          <P>(d) A practitioner shall exercise reasonable care to prevent the practitioner's employees, associates, and others whose services are utilized by the practitioner from disclosing or using confidences or secrets of a client, except that a practitioner may reveal the information allowed by paragraph (c) of this section through an employee.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.58-10.60</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.61</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 5.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should exercise independent professional judgment on behalf of a client.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.62</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refusing employment when the interest of the practitioner may impair the practitioner's independent professional judgment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Except with the consent of a client after full disclosure, a practitioner shall not accept employment if the exercise of the practitioner's professional judgment on behalf of the client will be or reasonably may be affected by the practitioner's own financial, business, property, or personal interests.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not accept employment in a proceeding before the Office if the practitioner knows or it is obvious that the practitioner or another practitioner in the practitioner's firm ought to sign an affidavit to be filed in the Office or be called as a witness, except that the practitioner may undertake the employment and the practitioner or another practitioner in the practitioner's firm may testify:</P>
          <P>(1) If the testimony will relate solely to an uncontested matter.</P>
          <P>(2) If the testimony will relate solely to a matter of formality and there is no reason to believe that substantial evidence will be offered in opposition to the testimony.</P>
          <P>(3) If the testimony will relate solely to the nature and value of legal services rendered in the case by the practitioner or the practitioner's firm to the client.</P>
          <P>(4) As to any matter, if refusal would work a substantial hardship on the client because of the distinctive value of the practitioner or the practitioner's firm as counsel in the particular case.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.63</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Withdrawal when the practitioner becomes a witness.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) If, after undertaking employment in a proceeding in the Office, a practitioner learns or it is obvious that the practitioner or another practitioner in the practitioner's firm ought to sign an affidavit to be filed in the Office or be <PRTPAGE P="345"/>called as a witness on behalf of a practitioner's client, the practitioner shall withdraw from the conduct of the proceeding and the practitioner's firm, if any, shall not continue representation in the proceeding, except that the practitioner may continue the representation and the practitioner or another practitioner in the practitioner's firm may testify in the circumstances enumerated in paragraphs (1) through (4) of § 10.62(b).</P>
          <P>(b) If, after undertaking employment in a proceeding before the Office, a practitioner learns or it is obvious that the practitioner or another practitioner in the practitioner's firm may be asked to sign an affidavit to be filed in the Office or be called as a witness other than on behalf of the practitioner's client, the practitioner may continue the representation until it is apparent that the practitioner's affidavit or testimony is or may be prejudicial to the practitioner's client.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.64</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Avoiding acquisition of interest in litigation or proceeding before the Office.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not acquire a proprietary interest in the subject matter of a proceeding before the Office which the practitioner is conducting for a client, except that the practitioner may:</P>
          <P>(1) Acquire a lien granted by law to secure the practitioner's fee or expenses; or</P>
          <P>(2) Contract with a client for a reasonable contingent fee; or</P>
          <P>(3) In a patent case, take an interest in the patent as part or all of his or her fee.</P>
          <P>(b) While representing a client in connection with a contemplated or pending proceeding before the Office, a practitioner shall not advance or guarantee financial assistance to a client, except that a practitioner may advance or guarantee the expenses of going forward in a proceeding before the Office including fees required by law to be paid to the Office, expenses of investigation, expenses of medical examination, and costs of obtaining and presenting evidence, provided the client remains ultimately liable for such expenses. A practitioner may, however, advance any fee required to prevent or remedy an abandonment of a client's application by reason of an act or omission attributable to the practitioner and not to the client, whether or not the client is ultimately liable for such fee.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.65</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limiting business relations with a client.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner shall not enter into a business transaction with a client if they have differing interests therein and if the client expects the practitioner to exercise professional judgment therein for the protection of the client, unless the client has consented after full disclosure.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.66</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Refusing to accept or continue employment if the interests of another client may impair the independent professional judgment of the practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall decline proffered employment if the exercise of the practitioner's independent professional judgment in behalf of a client will be or is likely to be adversely affected by the acceptance of the proffered employment, or if it would be likely to involve the practitioner in representing differing interests, except to the extent permitted under paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not continue multiple employment if the exercise of the practitioner's independent professional judgment in behalf of a client will be or is likely to be adversely affected by the practitoner's representation of another client, or if it would be likely to involve the practitioner in representing differing interests, except to the extent permitted under paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
          <P>(c) In the situations covered by paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section a practitioner may represent multiple clients if it is obvious that the practitioner can adequately represent the interest of each and if each consents to the representation after full disclosure of the possible effect of such representation on the exercise of the practitioner's independent professional judgment on behalf of each.</P>

          <P>(d) If a practitioner is required to decline employment or to withdraw from employment under a Disciplinary Rule, no partner, or associate, or any other <PRTPAGE P="346"/>practitioner affiliated with the practitioner or the practitioner's firm, may accept or continue such employment unless otherwise ordered by the Director or Commissioner.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.67</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Settling similar claims of clients.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner who represents two or more clients shall not make or participate in the making of an aggregate settlement of the claims of or against the practitioner's clients, unless each client has consented to the settlement after being advised of the existence and nature of all the claims involved in the proposed settlement, of the total amount of the settlement, and of the participation of each person in the settlement.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.68</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Avoiding influence by others than the client.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Except with the consent of the practitioner's client after full disclosure, a practitioner shall not:</P>
          <P>(1) Accept compensation from one other than the practitioner's client for the practitioner's legal services to or for the client.</P>
          <P>(2) Accept from one other than the practitioner's client any thing of value related to the practitioner's representation of or the practitioner's employment by the client.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not permit a person who recommends, employs, or pays the practitioner to render legal services for another, to direct or regulate the practitioner's professional judgment in rendering such legal services.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner shall not practice with or in the form of a professional corporation or association authorized to practice law for a profit, if a non-practitioner has the right to direct or control the professional judgment of a practitioner.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.69-10.75</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.76</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 6.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should represent a client competently.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.77</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Failing to act competently.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner shall not:</P>
          <P>(a) Handle a legal matter which the practitioner knows or should know that the practitioner is not competent to handle, without associating with the practitioner another practitioner who is competent to handle it.</P>
          <P>(b) Handle a legal matter without preparation adequate in the circumstances.</P>
          <P>(c) Neglect a legal matter entrusted to the practitioner.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.78</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Limiting liability to client.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner shall not attempt to exonerate himself or herself from, or limit his or her liability to, a client for his or her personal malpractice.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.79-10.82</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.83</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 7.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should represent a client zealously within the bounds of the law.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.84</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Representing a client zealously.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not intentionally:</P>
          <P>(1) Fail to seek the lawful objectives of a client through reasonably available means permitted by law and the Disciplinary Rules, except as provided by paragraph (b) of this section. A practitioner does not violate the provisions of this section, however, by acceding to reasonable requests of opposing counsel which do not prejudice the rights of the client, by being punctual in fulfilling all professional commitments, by avoiding offensive tactics, or by treating with courtesy and consideration all persons involved in the legal process.</P>
          <P>(2) Fail to carry out a contract of employment entered into with a client for professional services, but a practitioner may withdraw as permitted under §§ 10.40, 10.63, and 10.66.</P>
          <P>(3) Prejudice or damage a client during the course of a professional relationship, except as required under this part.</P>
          <P>(b) In representation of a client, a practitioner may:</P>
          <P>(1) Where permissible, exercise professional judgment to waive or fail to assert a right or position of the client.</P>

          <P>(2) Refuse to aid or participate in conduct that the practitioner believes <PRTPAGE P="347"/>to be unlawful, even though there is some support for an argument that the conduct is legal.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.85</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Representing a client within the bounds of the law.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) In representation of a client, a practitioner shall not:</P>
          <P>(1) Initiate or defend any proceeding before the Office, assert a position, conduct a defense, delay a trial or proceeding before the Office, or take other action on behalf of the practitioner's client when the practitioner knows or when it is obvious that such action would serve merely to harass or maliciously injure another.</P>
          <P>(2) Knowingly advance a claim or defense that is unwarranted under existing law, except that a practitioner may advance such claim or defense if it can be supported by good faith argument for an extension, modification, or reversal of existing law.</P>
          <P>(3) Conceal or knowingly fail to disclose that which the practitioner is required by law to reveal.</P>
          <P>(4) Knowingly use perjured testimony or false evidence.</P>
          <P>(5) Knowingly make a false statement of law or fact.</P>
          <P>(6) Participate in the creation or preservation of evidence when the practitioner knows or it is obvious that the evidence is false.</P>
          <P>(7) Counsel or assist a client in conduct that the practitioner knows to be illegal or fraudulent.</P>
          <P>(8) Knowingly engage in other illegal conduct or conduct contrary to a Disciplinary Rule.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner who receives information clearly establishing that:</P>
          <P>(1) A client has, in the course of the representation, perpetrated a fraud upon a person or tribunal shall promptly call upon the client to rectify the same, and if the client refuses or is unable to do so the practitioner shall reveal the fraud to the affected person or tribunal.</P>
          <P>(2) A person other than a client has perpetrated a fraud upon a tribunal shall promptly reveal the fraud to the tribunal.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.86</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.87</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Communicating with one of adverse interest.</SUBJECT>
          <P>During the course of representation of a client, a practitioner shall not:</P>
          <P>(a) Communicate or cause another to communicate on the subject of the representation with a party the practitioner knows to be represented by another practitioner in that matter unless the practitioner has the prior consent of the other practitioner representing such other party or is authorized by law to do so. It is not improper, however, for a practitioner to encourage a client to meet with an opposing party for settlement discussions.</P>
          <P>(b) Give advice to a person who is not represented by a practitioner other than the advice to secure counsel, if the interests of such person are or have a reasonable possibility of being in conflict with the interests of the practitioner's client.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.88</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Threatening criminal prosecution.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner shall not present, participate in presenting, or threaten to present criminal charges solely to obtain an advantage in any prospective or pending proceeding before the Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.89</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conduct in proceedings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not disregard or advise a client to disregard any provision of this Subchapter or a decision of the Office made in the course of a proceeding before the Office, but the practitioner may take appropriate steps in good faith to test the validity of such provision or decision.</P>
          <P>(b) In presenting a matter to the Office, a practitioner shall disclose:</P>
          <P>(1) Controlling legal authority known to the practitioner to be directly adverse to the position of the client and which is not disclosed by opposing counsel or an employee of the Office.</P>
          <P>(2) Unless privileged or irrelevant, the identities of the client the practitioner represents and of the persons who employed the practitioner.</P>

          <P>(c) In appearing in a professional capacity before a tribunal, a practitioner shall not:<PRTPAGE P="348"/>
          </P>
          <P>(1) State or allude to any matter that the practitioner has no reasonable basis to believe is relevant to the case or that will not be supported by admissible evidence.</P>
          <P>(2) Ask any question that the practitioner has no reasonable basis to believe is relevant to the case and that is intended to degrade a witness or other person.</P>
          <P>(3) Assert the practitioner's personal knowledge of the facts in issue, except when testifying as a witness.</P>
          <P>(4) Assert the practitioner's personal opinion as to the justness of a cause, as to the credibility of a witness, as to the culpability of a civil litigant, or as to the guilt or innocence of an accused; but the practitioner may argue, on the practitioner's analysis of the evidence, for any position or conclusion with respect to the matters stated herein.</P>
          <P>(5) Engage in undignified or discourteous conduct before the Office (see § 1.3 of the subchapter).</P>
          <P>(6) Intentionally or habitually violate any provision of this subchapter or established rule of evidence.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.90-10.91</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.92</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contact with witnesses.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not suppress any evidence that the practitioner or the practitioner's client has a legal obligation to reveal or produce.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not advise or cause a person to be secreted or to leave the jurisdiction of a tribunal for the purpose of making the person unavailable as a witness therein.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner shall not pay, offer to pay, or acquiesce in the payment of compensation to a witness contingent upon the content of the witness' affidavit, testimony or the outcome of the case. But a practitioner may advance, guarantee, or acquiesce in the payment of:</P>
          <P>(1) Expenses reasonably incurred by a witness in attending, testifying, or making an affidavit.</P>
          <P>(2) Reasonable compensation to a witness for the witness' loss of time in attending, testifying, or making an affidavit.</P>
          <P>(3) A reasonable fee for the professional services of an expert witness.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.93</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contact with officials.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not give or lend anything of value to a judge, official, or employee of a tribunal under circumstances which might give the appearance that the gift or loan is made to influence official action.</P>
          <P>(b) In an adversary proceeding, including any <E T="03">inter partes</E> proceeding before the Office, a practitioner shall not communicate, or cause another to communicate, as to the merits of the cause with a judge, official, or Office employee before whom the proceeding is pending, except:</P>
          <P>(1) In the course of official proceedings in the cause.</P>
          <P>(2) In writing if the practitioner promptly delivers a copy of the writing to opposing counsel or to the adverse party if the adverse party is not represented by a practitioner.</P>
          <P>(3) Orally upon adequate notice to opposing counsel or to the adverse party if the adverse party is not represented by a practitioner.</P>
          <P>(4) As otherwise authorized by law.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.94-10.99</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.100</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 8.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should assist in improving the legal system.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action as a public official.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner who holds public office shall not:</P>
          <P>(1) Use the practitioner's public position to obtain, or attempt to obtain, a special advantage in legislative matters for the practitioner or for a client under circumstances where the practitioner knows or it is obvious that such action is not in the public interest.</P>
          <P>(2) Use the practitioner's public position to influence, or attempt to influence, a tribunal to act in favor of the practitioner or of a client.</P>
          <P>(3) Accept any thing of value from any person when the practitioner knows or it is obvious that the offer is for the purpose of influencing the practitioner's action as a public official.</P>

          <P>(b) A practitioner who is an officer or employee of the United States shall not practice before the Office in patent <PRTPAGE P="349"/>cases except as provided in § 10.10(c) and (d).</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985, as amended at 54 FR 6520, Feb. 13, 1989]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Statements concerning officials.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not knowingly make false statements of fact concerning the qualifications of a candidate for election or appointment to a judicial office or to a position in the Office.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not knowingly make false accusations against a judge, other adjudicatory officer, or employee of the Office.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.103</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Practitioner candidate for judicial office.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner who is a candidate for judicial office shall comply with applicable provisions of law.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.104-10.109</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Canon 9.</SUBJECT>
          <P>A practitioner should avoid even the appearance of professional impropriety.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.111</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Avoiding even the appearance of impropriety.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner shall not accept private employment in a matter upon the merits of which he or she has acted in a judicial capacity.</P>
          <P>(b) A practitioner shall not accept private employment in a matter in which he or she had personal responsibility while a public employee.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner shall not state or imply that the practitioner is able to influence improperly or upon irrelevant grounds any tribunal, legislative body, or public official.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.112</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Preserving identity of funds and property of client.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) All funds of clients paid to a practitioner or a practitioner's firm, other than advances for costs and expenses, shall be deposited in one or more identifiable bank accounts maintained in the United States or, in the case of a practitioner having an office in a foreign country or registered under § 11.6(c), in the United States or the foreign country.</P>
          <P>(b) No funds belonging to the practitioner or the practitioner's firm shall be deposited in the bank accounts required by paragraph (a) of this section except as follows:</P>
          <P>(1) Funds reasonably sufficient to pay bank charges may be deposited therein.</P>
          <P>(2) Funds belonging in part to a client and in part presently or potentially to the practitioner or the practitioner's firm must be deposited therein, but the portion belonging to the practitioner or the practitioner's firm may be withdrawn when due unless the right of the practitioner or the practitioner's firm to receive it is disputed by the client, in which event the disputed portion shall not be withdrawn until the dispute is finally resolved.</P>
          <P>(c) A practitioner shall:</P>
          <P>(1) Promptly notify a client of the receipt of the client's funds, securities, or other properties.</P>
          <P>(2) Identify and label securities and properties of a client promptly upon receipt and place them in a safe deposit box or other place of safekeeping as soon as practicable.</P>
          <P>(3) Maintain complete records of all funds, securities, and other properties of a client coming into the possession of the practitioner and render appropriate accounts to the client regarding the funds, securities, or other properties.</P>
          <P>(4) Promptly pay or deliver to the client as requested by a client the funds, securities, or other properties in the possession of the practitioner which the client is entitled to receive.</P>
          <APPRO>(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 0651-0017)</APPRO>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985, as amended at 70 FR 56129, Sept. 26, 2005]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.113-10.129</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
      <SUBJGRP>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Investigations and Disciplinary Proceedings</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.130</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reprimand, suspension or exclusion.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) The Commissioner may, after notice and opportunity for a hearing, (1) reprimand or (2) suspend or exclude, either generally or in any particular case, any individual, attorney, or agent <PRTPAGE P="350"/>shown to be incompetent or disreputable, who is guilty of gross misconduct, or who violates a Disciplinary Rule.</P>
          <P>(b) Petitions to disqualify a practitioner in <E T="03">ex parte</E> or <E T="03">inter partes</E> cases in the Office are not governed by §§ 10.130 through 10.170 and will be handled on a case-by-case basis under such conditions as the Commissioner deems appropriate.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.131</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Investigations.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The Director is authorized to investigate possible violations of Disciplinary Rules by practitioners. See § 10.2(b)(2).</P>
          <P>(b) Practitioners shall report and reveal to the Director any knowledge or evidence required by § 10.24. A practitioner shall cooperate with the Director in connection with any investigation under paragraph (a) of this section and with officials of the Office in connection with any disciplinary proceeding instituted under § 10.132(b).</P>
          <P>(c) Any non-practitioner possessing knowledge or information concerning a violation of a Disciplinary Rule by a practitioner may report the violation to the Director. The Director may require that the report be presented in the form of an affidavit.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.132</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Initiating a disciplinary proceeding; reference to an administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) If after conducting an investigation under § 10.131(a) the Director is of the opinion that a practitioner has violated a Disciplinary Rule, the Director shall, after complying where necessary with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 558(c), call a meeting of the Committee on Discipline. The Committee on Discipline shall then determine as specified in § 10.4(b) whether a disciplinary proceeding shall be instituted under paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(b) If the Committee on Discipline determines that probable cause exists to believe that a practitioner has violated a Disciplinary Rule, the Director shall institute a disciplinary proceeding by filing a complaint under § 10.134. The complaint shall be filed in the Office of the Director. A disciplinary proceeding may result in:</P>
          <P>(1) A reprimand, or</P>
          <P>(2) Suspension or exclusion of a practitioner from practice before the Office.</P>
          <P>(c) Upon the filing of a complaint under § 10.134, the Commissioner will refer the disciplinary proceeding to an administrative law judge.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.133</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conference between Director and practitioner; resignation.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General.</E> The Director may confer with a practitioner concerning possible violations by the practitioner of a Disciplinary Rule whether or not a disciplinary proceeding has been instituted.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Resignation.</E> Any practitioner who is the subject of an investigation under § 10.131 or against whom a complaint has been filed under § 10.134 may resign from practice before the Office only by submitting with the Director an affidavit stating his or her desire to resign.</P>
          <P>(c) If filed prior to the date set by the administrative law judge for a hearing, the affidavit shall state that:</P>
          <P>(1) The resignation is freely and voluntarily proffered;</P>
          <P>(2) The practitioner is not acting under duress or coercion from the Office;</P>
          <P>(3) The practitioner is fully aware of the implications of filing the resignation;</P>
          <P>(4) The practitioner is aware (i) of a pending investigation or (ii) of charges arising from the complaint alleging that he or she is guilty of a violation of the Patent and Trademark Office Code of Professional Responsibility, the nature of which shall be set forth by the practitioner to the satisfaction of the Director;</P>
          <P>(5) The practitioner acknowledges that, if and when he or she applies for reinstatement under § 10.160, the Director will conclusively presume, for the limited purpose of determining the application for reinstatement, that:</P>
          <P>(i) The facts upon which the complaint is based are true and</P>

          <P>(ii) The practitioner could not have successfully defended himself or herself against (A) charges predicated on the violation under investigation or (B) charges set out in the complaint filed against the practitioner.<PRTPAGE P="351"/>
          </P>
          <P>(d) If filed on or after the date set by the administrative law judge for a hearing, the affidavit shall make the statements required by paragraphs (b) (1) through (4) of this section and shall state that:</P>
          <P>(1) The practitioner acknowledges the facts upon which the complaint is based are true; and</P>
          <P>(2) The resignation is being submitted because the practitioner could not successfully defend himself or herself against (i) charges predicated on the violation under investigation or (ii) charges set out in the complaint.</P>
          <P>(e) When an affidavit under paragraph (b) or (c) of this section is received while an investigation is pending, the Commissioner shall enter an order excluding the practitioner “on consent.” When an affidavit under paragraph (b) or (c) of this section is received after a complaint under § 10.134 has been filed, the Director shall notify the administrative law judge. The administrative law judge shall enter an order transferring the disciplinary proceeding to the Commissioner and the Commissioner shall enter an order excluding the practitioner “on consent.”</P>
          <P>(f) Any practitioner who resigns from practice before the Office under this section and who intends to reapply for admission to practice before the Office must comply with the provisions of § 10.158.</P>
          <P>(g) <E T="03">Settlement.</E> Before or after a complaint is filed under § 10.134, a settlement conference may occur between the Director and a practitioner for the purpose of settling any disciplinary matter. If an offer of settlement is made by the Director or the practitioner and is not accepted by the other, no reference to the offer of settlement or its refusal shall be admissible in evidence in the disciplinary proceeding unless both the Director and the practitioner agree in writing.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.134</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A complaint instituting a disciplinary proceeding shall:</P>
          <P>(1) Name the practitioner, who may then be referred to as the “respondent.”</P>
          <P>(2) Give a plain and concise description of the alleged violations of the Disciplinary Rules by the practitioner.</P>
          <P>(3) State the place and time for filing an answer by the respondent.</P>
          <P>(4) State that a decision by default may be entered against the respondent if an answer is not timely filed.</P>
          <P>(5) Be signed by the Director.</P>
          <P>(b) A complaint will be deemed sufficient if it fairly informs the respondent of any violation of the Disciplinary Rules which form the basis for the disciplinary proceeding so that the respondent is able to adequately prepare a defense.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.135</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Service of complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A complaint may be served on a respondent in any of the following methods:</P>
          <P>(1) By handing a copy of the complaint personally to the respondent, in which case the individual handing the complaint to the respondent shall file an affidavit with the Director indicating the time and place the complaint was handed to the respondent.</P>
          <P>(2) By mailing a copy of the complaint by “Express Mail” or first-class mail to:</P>
          <P>(i) A registered practitioner at the address for which separate notice was last received by the Director or</P>
          <P>(ii) A non-registered practitioner at the last address for the respondent known to the Director.</P>
          <P>(3) By any method mutually agreeable to the Director and the respondent.</P>

          <P>(b) If a complaint served by mail under paragraph (a)(2) of this section is returned by the U.S. Postal Service, the Director shall mail a second copy of the complaint to the respondent. If the second copy of the complaint is also returned by the U.S. Postal Service, the Director shall serve the respondent by publishing an appropriate notice in the <E T="03">Official Gazette</E> for four consecutive weeks, in which case the time for answer shall be at least thirty days from the fourth publication of the notice.</P>

          <P>(c) If a respondent is a registered practitioner, the Director may serve simultaneously with the complaint a letter under § 10.11(b). The Director may require the respondent to answer the <PRTPAGE P="352"/>§ 10.11(b) letter within a period of not less than 15 days. An answer to the § 10.11(b) letter shall constitute proof of service. If the respondent fails to answer the § 10.11(b) letter, his or her name will be removed from the register as provided by § 10.11(b).</P>
          <P>(d) If the respondent is represented by an attorney under § 10.140(a), a copy of the complaint shall also be served on the attorney.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.136</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Answer to complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Time for answer.</E> An answer to a complaint shall be filed within a time set in the complaint which shall be not less than thirty days.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">With whom filed.</E> The answer shall be filed in writing with the administrative law judge. The time for filing an answer may be extended once for a period of no more than thirty days by the administrative law judge upon a showing of good cause provided a motion requesting an extension of time is filed within thirty days after the date the complaint is filed by the Director. A copy of the answer shall be served on the Director.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Content.</E> The respondent shall include in the answer a statement of the facts which constitute the grounds of defense and shall specifically admit or deny each allegation set forth in the complaint. The respondent shall not deny a material allegation in the complaint which the respondent knows to be true or state that respondent is without sufficient information to form a belief as to the truth of an allegation when in fact the respondent possesses that information. The respondent shall also state affirmatively special matters of defense.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Failure to deny allegations in complaint.</E> Every allegation in the complaint which is not denied by a respondent in the answer is deemed to be admitted and may be considered proven. No further evidence in respect of that allegation need be received by the administrative law judge at any hearing. Failure to timely file an answer will constitute an admission of the allegations in the complaint.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Reply by Director.</E> No reply to an answer is required by the Director and any affirmative defense in the answer shall be deemed to be denied. The Director may, however, file a reply if he or she chooses or if ordered by the administrative law judge.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985; 50 FR 25073, June 17, 1985]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.137</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Supplemental complaint.</SUBJECT>
          <P>False statements in an answer may be made the basis of a supplemental complaint.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.138</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Contested case.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Upon the filing of an answer by the respondent, a disciplinary proceeding shall be regarded as a contested case within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. 24. Evidence obtained by a subpoena issued under 35 U.S.C. 24 shall not be admitted into the record or considered unless leave to proceed under 35 U.S.C. 24 was previously authorized by the administrative law judge.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.139</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Administrative law judge; appointment; responsibilities; review of interlocutory orders; stays.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Appointment.</E> An administrative law judge, appointed under 5 U.S.C. 3105, shall conduct disciplinary proceedings as provided by this part.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Responsibilities.</E> The administrative law judge shall have authority to:</P>
          <P>(1) Administer oaths and affirmations;</P>
          <P>(2) Make rulings upon motions and other requests;</P>
          <P>(3) Rule upon offers of proof, receive relevant evidence, and examine witnesses;</P>
          <P>(4) Authorize the taking of a deposition of a witness in lieu of personal appearance of the witness before the administrative law judge;</P>
          <P>(5) Determine the time and place of any hearing and regulate its course and conduct;</P>
          <P>(6) Hold or provide for the holding of conferences to settle or simplify the issues;</P>
          <P>(7) Receive and consider oral or written arguments on facts or law;</P>
          <P>(8) Adopt procedures and modify procedures from time to time as occasion requires for the orderly disposition of proceedings;</P>
          <P>(9) Make initial decisions under § 10.154; and</P>

          <P>(10) Perform acts and take measures as necessary to promote the efficient <PRTPAGE P="353"/>and timely conduct of any disciplinary proceeding.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Time for making initial decision.</E> The administrative law judge shall set times and exercise control over a disciplinary proceeding such that an initial decision under § 10.154 is normally issued within six months of the date a complaint is filed. The administrative law judge may, however, issue an initial decision more than six months after a complaint is filed if in his or her opinion there exist unusual circumstances which preclude issuance of an initial decision within six months of the filing of the complaint.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Review of interlocutory orders.</E> An interlocutory order of an administrative law judge will not be reviewed by the Commissioner except:</P>
          <P>(1) When the administrative law judge shall be of the opinion (i) that the interlocutory order involves a controlling question of procedure or law as to which there is a substantial ground for a difference of opinion and (ii) that an immediate decision by the Commissioner may materially advance the ultimate termination of the disciplinary proceeding or</P>
          <P>(2) In an extraordinary situation where justice requires review</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Stays pending review of interlocutory order.</E> If the Director or a respondent seeks review of an interlocutory order of an administrative law judge under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, any time period set for taking action by the administrative law judge shall not be stayed unless ordered by the Commissioner or the administrative law judge.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985; 50 FR 25073, June 17, 1985]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.140</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Representative for Director or respondent.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A respondent may be represented before the Office in connection with an investigation or disciplinary proceeding by an attorney. The attorney shall file a written declaration that he or she is an attorney within the meaning of § 10.1(c) and shall state:</P>
          <P>(1) The address to which the attorney wants correspondence related to the investigation or disciplinary proceeding sent and</P>
          <P>(2) A telephone number where the attorney may be reached during normal business hours.</P>
          <P>(b) The Commissioner shall designate at least two associate solicitors in the Office of the Solicitor to act as representatives for the Director in disciplinary proceedings. In prosecuting disciplinary proceedings, the designated associate solicitors shall not involve the Solicitor or the Deputy Solicitor. The Solicitor and the Deputy Solicitor shall remain insulated from the investigation and prosecution of all disciplinary proceedings in order that they shall be available as counsel to the Commissioner in deciding disciplinary proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.141</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing of papers.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The provisions of § 1.8 of this subchapter do not apply to disciplinary proceedings.</P>
          <P>(b) All papers filed after the complaint and prior to entry of an initial decision by the administrative law judge shall be filed with the administrative law judge at an address or place designated by the administrative law judge. All papers filed after entry of an initial decision by the administrative law judge shall be filed with the Director. The Director shall promptly forward to the Commissioner any paper which requires action under this part by the Commissioner.</P>
          <P>(c) The administrative law judge or the Director may provide for filing papers and other matters by hand or by “Express Mail.”</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.142</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Service of papers.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) All papers other than a complaint shall be served on a respondent represented by an attorney by:</P>
          <P>(1) Delivering a copy of the paper to the office of the attorney; or</P>
          <P>(2) Mailing a copy of the paper by first-class mail or “Express Mail” to the attorney at the address provided by the attorney under § 10.140(a)(1); or</P>
          <P>(3) Any other method mutually agreeable to the attorney and a representative for the Director.</P>
          <P>(b) All papers other than a complaint shall be served on a respondent who is not represented by an attorney by:</P>

          <P>(1) Delivering a copy of the paper to the respondent; or<PRTPAGE P="354"/>
          </P>
          <P>(2) Mailing a copy of the paper by first-class mail or “Express Mail” to the respondent at the address to which a complaint may be served or such other address as may be designated in writing by the respondent; or</P>
          <P>(3) Any other method mutually agreeable to the respondent and a representative of the Director.</P>
          <P>(c) A respondent shall serve on the representative for the Director one copy of each paper filed with the administrative law judge or the Director. A paper may be served on the representative for the Director by:</P>
          <P>(1) Delivering a copy of the paper to the representative; or</P>
          <P>(2) Mailing a copy of the paper by first-class mail or “Express Mail” to an address designated in writing by the representative; or</P>
          <P>(3) Any other method mutually agreeable to the respondent and the representative.</P>
          <P>(d) Each paper filed in a disciplinary proceeding shall contain therein a certificate of service indicating:</P>
          <P>(1) The date on which service was made and</P>
          <P>(2) The method by which service was made.</P>
          <P>(e) The administrative law judge or the Commissioner may require that a paper be served by hand or by “Express Mail.”</P>
          <P>(f) Service by mail is completed when the paper mailed in the United States is placed into the custody of the U.S. Postal Service.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.143</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Motions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Motions may be filed with the administrative law judge. The administrative law judge will determine on a case-by-case basis the time period for response to a motion and whether replies to responses will be authorized. No motion shall be filed with the administrative law judge unless such motion is supported by a written statement by the moving party that the moving party or attorney for the moving party has conferred with the opposing party or attorney for the opposing party in an effort in good faith to resolve by agreement the issues raised by the motion and has been unable to reach agreement. If issues raised by a motion are resolved by the parties prior to a decision on the motion by the administrative law judge, the parties shall promptly notify the administrative law judge.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.144</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Hearings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The administrative law judge shall preside at hearings in disciplinary proceedings. Hearings will be stenographically recorded and transcribed and the testimony of witnesses will be received under oath or affirmation. The administrative law judge shall conduct hearings in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 556. A copy of the transcript of the hearing shall become part of the record. A copy of the transcript shall be provided to the Director and the respondent at the expense of the Office.</P>
          <P>(b) If the respondent to a disciplinary proceeding fails to appear at the hearing after a notice of hearing has been given by the administrative law judge, the administrative law judge may deem the respondent to have waived the right to a hearing and may proceed with the hearing in the absence of the respondent.</P>

          <P>(c) A hearing under this section will not be open to the public except that the Director may grant a request by a respondent to open his or her hearing to the public and make the record of the disciplinary proceeding available for public inspection, <E T="03">provided</E>, Agreement is reached in advance to exclude from public disclosure information which is privileged or confidential under applicable laws or regulations. If a disciplinary proceeding results in disciplinary action against a practitioner, and subject to § 10.159(c), the record of the entire disciplinary proceeding, including any settlement agreement, will be available for public inspection.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.145</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Proof; variance; amendment of pleadings.</SUBJECT>

          <P>In case of a variance between the evidence and the allegations in a complaint, answer, or reply, if any, the administrative law judge may order or authorize amendment of the complaint, answer, or reply to conform to the evidence. Any party who would otherwise be prejudiced by the amendment will be given reasonable opportunity to meet the allegations in the <PRTPAGE P="355"/>complaint, answer, or reply, as amended, and the administrative law judge shall make findings on any issue presented by the complaint, answer, or reply as amended.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.146-10.148</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.149</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Burden of proof.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In a disciplinary proceeding, the Director shall have the burden of proving his or her case by clear and convincing evidence and a respondent shall have the burden of proving any affirmative defense by clear and convincing evidence.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.150</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Rules of evidence.</E> The rules of evidence prevailing in courts of law and equity are not controlling in hearings in disciplinary proceedings. However, the administrative law judge shall exclude evidence which is irrelevant, immaterial, or unduly repetitious.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Depositions.</E> Depositions of witnesses taken pursuant to § 10.151 may be admitted as evidence.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Government documents.</E> Official documents, records, and papers of the Office are admissible without extrinsic evidence of authenticity. These documents, records and papers may be evidenced by a copy certified as correct by an employee of the Office.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Exhibits.</E> If any document, record, or other paper is introduced in evidence as an exhibit, the administrative law judge may authorize the withdrawal of the exhibit subject to any conditions the administrative law judge deems appropriate.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Objections.</E> Objections to evidence will be in short form, stating the grounds of objection. Objections and rulings on objections will be a part of the record. No exception to the ruling is necessary to preserve the rights of the parties.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.151</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Depositions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Depositions for use at the hearing in lieu of personal appearance of a witness before the administrative law judge may be taken by respondent or the Director upon a showing of good cause and with the approval of, and under such conditions as may be deemed appropriate by, the administrative law judge. Depositions may be taken upon oral or written questions, upon not less than ten days written notice to the other party, before any officer authorized to administer an oath or affirmation in the place where the deposition is to be taken. The requirement of ten days notice may be waived by the parties and depositions may then be taken of a witness and at a time and place mutually agreed to by the parties. When a deposition is taken upon written questions, copies of the written questions will be served upon the other party with the notice and copies of any written cross-questions will be served by hand or “Express Mail” not less than five days before the date of the taking of the deposition unless the parties mutually agree otherwise. A party on whose behalf a deposition is taken shall file a copy of a transcript of the deposition signed by a court reporter with the administrative law judge and shall serve one copy upon the opposing party. Expenses for a court reporter and preparing, serving, and filing depositions shall be borne by the party at whose instance the deposition is taken.</P>
          <P>(b) When the Director and the respondent agree in writing, a deposition of any witness who will appear voluntarily may be taken under such terms and condition as may be mutually agreeable to the Director and the respondent. The deposition shall not be filed with the administrative law judge and may not be admitted in evidence before the administrative law judge unless he or she orders the deposition admitted in evidence. The admissibility of the deposition shall lie within the discretion of the administrative law judge who may reject the deposition on any reasonable basis including the fact that demeanor is involved and that the witness should have been called to appear personally before the administrative law judge.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.152</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Discovery.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Discovery shall not be authorized except as follows:</P>

          <P>(a) After an answer is filed under § 10.136 and when a party establishes in a clear and convincing manner that discovery is necessary and relevant, the administrative law judge, under <PRTPAGE P="356"/>such conditions as he or she deems appropriate, may order an opposing party to:</P>
          <P>(1) Answer a reasonable number of written requests for admission or interrogatories;</P>
          <P>(2) Produce for inspection and copying a reasonable number of documents; and</P>
          <P>(3) Produce for inspection a reasonable number of things other than documents.</P>
          <P>(b) Discovery shall not be authorized under paragraph (a) of this section of any matter which:</P>
          <P>(1) Will be used by another party solely for impeachment or cross-examination;</P>
          <P>(2) Is not available to the party under 35 U.S.C. 122;</P>
          <P>(3) Relates to any disciplinary proceeding commenced in the Patent and Trademark Office prior to March 8, 1985;</P>
          <P>(4) Relates to experts except as the administrative law judge may require under paragraph (e) of this section.</P>
          <P>(5) Is privileged; or</P>
          <P>(6) Relates to mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of any attorney or other representative of a party.</P>
          <P>(c) The administrative law judge may deny discovery requested under paragraph (a) of this section if the discovery sought:</P>
          <P>(1) Will unduly delay the disciplinary proceeding;</P>
          <P>(2) Will place an undue burden on the party required to produce the discovery sought; or</P>
          <P>(3) Is available (i) generally to the public, (ii) equally to the parties; or (iii) to the party seeking the discovery through another source.</P>
          <P>(d) Prior to authorizing discovery under paragraph (a) of this section, the administrative law judge shall require the party seeking discovery to file a motion (§ 10.143) and explain in detail for each request made how the discovery sought is necessary and relevant to an issue actually raised in the complaint or the answer.</P>
          <P>(e) The administrative law judge may require parties to file and serve, prior to any hearing, a pre-hearing statement which contains:</P>
          <P>(1) A list (together with a copy) of all proposed exhibits to be used in connection with a party's case-in-chief,</P>
          <P>(2) A list of proposed witnesses,</P>
          <P>(3) As to each proposed expert witness:</P>
          <P>(i) An identification of the field in which the individual will be qualified as an expert;</P>
          <P>(ii) A statement as to the subject matter on which the expert is expected to testify; and</P>
          <P>(iii) A statement of the substance of the facts and opinions to which the expert is expected to testify,</P>
          <P>(4) The identity of government employees who have investigated the case, and</P>
          <P>(5) Copies of memoranda reflecting respondent's own statements to administrative representatives.</P>
          <P>(f) After a witness testifies for a party, if the opposing party requests, the party may be required to produce, prior to cross-examination, any written statement made by the witness.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.153</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Proposed findings and conclusions; post-hearing memorandum.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Except in cases when the respondent has failed to answer the complaint, the administrative law judge, prior to making an initial decision, shall afford the parties a reasonable opportunity to submit proposed findings and conclusions and a post-hearing memorandum in support of the proposed findings and conclusions.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.154</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Initial decision of administrative law judge.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) The administrative law judge shall make an initial decision in the case. The decision will include (1) a statement of findings and conclusions, as well as the reasons or basis therefore with appropriate references to the record, upon all the material issues of fact, law, or discretion presented on the record, and (2) an order of suspension or exclusion from practice, an order of reprimand, or an order dismissing the complaint. The administrative law judge shall file the decision with the Director and shall transmit a <PRTPAGE P="357"/>copy to the representative of the Director and to the respondent. In the absence of an appeal to the Commissioner, the decision of the administrative law judge will, without further proceedings, become the decision of the Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks thirty (30) days from the date of the decision of the administrative law judge.</P>
          <P>(b) The initial decision of the administrative law judge shall explain the reason for any penalty or reprimand, suspension or exclusion. In determining any penalty, the following should normally be considered:</P>
          <P>(1) The public interest;</P>
          <P>(2) The seriousness of the violation of the Disciplinary Rule;</P>
          <P>(3) The deterrent effects deemed necessary;</P>
          <P>(4) The integrity of the legal profession; and</P>
          <P>(5) Any extenuating circumstances.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985; 50 FR 25073, June 17, 1985]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.155</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeal to the Commissioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Within thirty (30) days from the date of the initial decision of the administrative law judge under § 10.154, either party may appeal to the Commissioner. If an appeal is taken, the time for filing a cross-appeal expires 14 days after the date of service of the appeal pursuant to § 10.142 or 30 days after the date of initial decision of the administrative law judge, whichever is later. An appeal or cross-appeal by the respondent will be filed and served with the Director in duplicate and will include exceptions to the decisions of the administrative law judge and supporting reasons for those exceptions. If the Director files the appeal or cross-appeal, the Director shall serve on the other party a copy of the appeal or cross-appeal. The other party to an appeal or cross-appeal may file a reply brief. A respondent's reply brief shall be filed and served in duplicate with the Director. The time for filing any reply brief expires thirty (30) days after the date of service pursuant to § 10.142 of an appeal, cross-appeal or copy thereof. If the Director files a reply brief, the Director shall serve on the other party a copy of the reply brief. Upon the filing of an appeal, cross-appeal, if any, and reply briefs, if any, the Director shall transmit the entire record to the Commissioner.</P>
          <P>(b) The appeal will be decided by the Commissioner on the record made before the administrative law judge.</P>
          <P>(c) The Commissioner may order reopening of a disciplinary proceeding in accordance with the principles which govern the granting of new trials. Any request to reopen a disciplinary proceeding on the basis of newly discovered evidence must demonstrate that the newly discovered evidence could not have been discovered by due diligence.</P>
          <P>(d) In the absence of an appeal by the Director, failure by the respondent to appeal under the provisions of this section shall be deemed to be both acceptance by the respondent of the initial decision and waiver by the respondent of the right to further administrative or judicial review.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985, as amended at 54 FR 26026, June 21, 1989; 60 FR 64126, Dec. 14, 1995]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.156</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decision of the Commissioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) An appeal from an initial decision of the administrative law judge shall be decided by the Commissioner. The Commissioner may affirm, reverse or modify the initial decision or remand the matter to the administrative law judge for such further proceedings as the Commissioner may deem appropriate. Subject to paragraph (c) of this section, a decision by the Commissioner does not become a final agency action in a disciplinary proceeding until 20 days after it is entered. In making a final decision, the Commissioner shall review the record or those portions of the record as may be cited by the parties in order to limit the issues. The Commissioner shall transmit a copy of the final decision to the Director and to the respondent.</P>
          <P>(b) A final decision of the Commissioner may dismiss a disciplinary proceeding, reprimand a practitioner, or may suspend or exclude the practitioner from practice before the Office.</P>

          <P>(c) A single request for reconsideration or modification of the Commissioner's decision may be made by the respondent or the Director if filed within 20 days from the date of entry of the decision. Such a request shall have <PRTPAGE P="358"/>the effect of staying the effective date of the decision. The decision by the Commissioner on the request is a final agency action in a disciplinary proceeding and is effective on its date of entry.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985, as amended at 54 FR 6660, Feb. 14, 1989]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.157</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Review of Commissioner's final decision.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Review of the Commissioner's final decision in a disciplinary case may be had, subject to § 10.155(d), by a petition filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. See 35 U.S.C. 32 and Local Rule 213 of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.</P>
          <P>(b) The Commissioner may stay a final decision pending review of the Commissioner's final decision.</P>
          <CITA>[50 FR 5172, Feb. 6, 1985; 53 FR 13120, Apr. 21, 1988, as amended at 54 FR 26027, June 21, 1989]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.158</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Suspended or excluded practitioner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A practitioner who is suspended or excluded from practice before the Office under § 10.156(b) shall not engage in unauthorized practice of patent, trademark and other non-patent law before the Office.</P>
          <P>(b) Unless otherwise ordered by the Commissioner, any practitioner who is suspended or excluded from practice before the Office under § 10.156(b) shall:</P>
          <P>(1) Within 30 days of entry of the order of suspension or exclusion, notify all bars of which he or she is a member and all clients of the practitioner for whom he or she is handling matters before the Office in separate written communications of the suspension or exclusion and shall file a copy of each written communication with the Director.</P>
          <P>(2) Within 30 days of entry of the order of suspension or exclusion, surrender a client's active Office case files to (i) the client or (ii) another practitioner designated by the client.</P>
          <P>(3) Not hold himself or herself out as authorized to practice law before the Office.</P>
          <P>(4) Promptly take any necessary and appropriate steps to remove from any telephone, legal, or other directory any advertisement, statement, or representation which would reasonably suggest that the practitioner is authorized to practice patent, trademark or other non-patent law before the Office, and within 30 days of taking those steps, file with the Director an affidavit describing the precise nature of the steps taken.</P>
          <P>(5) Not advertise the practitioner's availability or ability to perform or render legal services for any person having immediate, prospective, or pending business before the Office.</P>
          <P>(6) Not render legal advice or services to any person having immediate, prospective, or pending business before the Office as to that business.</P>
          <P>(7) Promptly take steps to change any sign identifying a practitioner's or the practitioner's firm's office and the practitioner's or the practitioner's firm's stationery to delete therefrom any advertisement, statement, or representation which would reasonably suggest that the practitioner is authorized to practice law before the Office.</P>
          <P>(8) Within 30 days, return to any client any unearned funds, including any unearned retainer fee, and any securities and property of the client.</P>

          <P>(c) A practitioner who is suspended or excluded from practice before the Office and who aids another practitioner in any way in the other practitioner's practice of law before the Office, may, under the direct supervision of the other practitioner, act as a para-legal for the other practitioner or perform other services for the other practitioner which are normally performed by lay-persons, <E T="03">Provided:</E>
          </P>
          <P>(1) The practitioner who is suspended or excluded is:</P>
          <P>(i) A salaried employee of:</P>
          <P>(A) The other practitioner;</P>
          <P>(B) The other practitioner's law firm; or</P>
          <P>(C) A client-employer who employs the other practitioner as a salaried employee;</P>
          <P>(2) The other practitioner assumes full professional responsibility to any client and the Office for any work performed by the suspended or excluded practitioner for the other practitioner;</P>

          <P>(3) The suspended or excluded practitioner, in connection with any immediate, prospective, or pending business before the Office, does not:<PRTPAGE P="359"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) Communicate directly in writing, orally, or otherwise with a client of the other practitioner;</P>
          <P>(ii) Render any legal advice or any legal services to a client of the other practitioner; or</P>
          <P>(iii) Meet in person or in the presence of the other practitioner with:</P>
          <P>(A) Any Office official in connection with the prosecution of any patent, trademark, or other case;</P>
          <P>(B) Any client of the other practitioner, the other practitioner's law firm, or the client-employer of the other practitioner;</P>
          <P>(C) Any witness or potential witness which the other practitioner, the other practitioner's law firm, or the other practitioner's client-employer may or intends to call as a witness in any proceeding before the Office. The term “witness” includes individuals who will testify orally in a proceeding before, or sign an affidavit or any other document to be filed in, the Office.</P>
          <P>(d) When a suspended or excluded practitioner acts as a para-legal or performs services under paragraph (c) of this section, the suspended or excluded practitioner shall not thereafter be reinstated to practice before the Office unless:</P>
          <P>(1) The suspended or excluded practitioner shall have filed with the Director an affidavit which (i) explains in detail the precise nature of all para-legal or other services performed by the suspended or excluded practitioner and (ii) shows by clear and convincing evidence that the suspended or excluded practitioner has complied with the provisions of this section and all Disciplinary Rules, and</P>
          <P>(2) The other practitioner shall have filed with the Director a written statement which (i) shows that the other practitioner has read the affidavit required by subparagraph (d)(1) of this section and that the other practitioner believes every statement in the affidavit to be true and (ii) states why the other practitioner believes that the suspended or excluded practitioner has complied with paragraph (c) of this section.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.159</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of suspension or exclusion.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Upon issuance of a final decision reprimanding a practitioner or suspending or excluding a practitioner from practice before the Office, the Director shall give notice of the final decision to appropriate employees of the Office and to interested departments, agencies, and courts of the United States. The Director shall also give notice to appropriate authorities of any State in which a practitioner is known to be a member of the bar and any appropriate bar association.</P>
          <P>(b) The Director shall cause to be published in the <E T="03">Official Gazette</E> the name of any practitioner suspended or excluded from practice. Unless otherwise ordered by the Commissioner, the Director shall publish in the <E T="03">Official Gazette</E> the name of any practitioner reprimanded by the Commissioner.</P>
          <P>(c) The Director shall maintain records, which shall be available for public inspection, of every disciplinary proceeding where a practitioner is reprimanded, suspended, or excluded unless the Commissioner orders that the proceeding be kept confidential.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.160</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Petition for reinstatement.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A petition for reinstatement of a practitioner suspended for a period of less than five years will not be considered until the period of suspension has passed.</P>
          <P>(b) A petition for reinstatement of a practitioner excluded from practice will not be considered until five years after the effective date of the exclusion.</P>
          <P>(c) An individual who has resigned under § 10.133 or who has been suspended or excluded may file a petition for reinstatement. The Director may grant a petition for reinstatement when the individual makes a clear and convincing showing that the individual will conduct himself or herself in accordance with the regulations of this part and that granting a petition for reinstatement is not contrary to the public interest. As a condition to reinstatement, the Director may require the individual to:</P>

          <P>(1) Meet the requirements of § 10.7, including taking and passing an examination under § 10.7(b) and<PRTPAGE P="360"/>
          </P>
          <P>(2) Pay all or a portion of the costs and expenses, not to exceed $1,500, of the disciplinary proceeding which led to suspension or exclusion.</P>
          <P>(d) Any suspended or excluded practitioner who has violated the provisions of § 10.158 during his or her period of suspension or exclusion shall not be entitled to reinstatement until such time as the Director is satisfied that a period of suspension equal in time to that ordered by the Commissioner or exclusion for five years has passed during which the suspended or excluded practitioner has complied with the provisions of § 10.158.</P>

          <P>(e) Proceedings on any petition for reinstatement shall be open to the public. Before reinstating any suspended or excluded practitioner, the Director shall publish in the <E T="03">Official Gazette</E> a notice of the suspended or excluded practitioner's petition for reinstatement and shall permit the public a reasonable opportunity to comment or submit evidence with respect to the petition for reinstatement.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.161</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Savings clause.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A disciplinary proceeding based on conduct engaged in prior to the effective date of these regulations may be instituted subsequent to such effective date, if such conduct would continue to justify suspension or exclusion under the provisions of this part.</P>
          <P>(b) No practitioner shall be subject to a disciplinary proceeding under this part based on conduct engaged in before the effective date hereof if such conduct would not have been subject to disciplinary action before such effective date.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§§ 10.162-10.169</SECTNO>
          <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 10.170</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Suspension of rules.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) In an extraordinary situation, when justice requires, any requirement of the regulations of this part which is not a requirement of the statutes may be suspended or waived by the Commissioner or the Commissioner's designee, <E T="03">sua sponte,</E> or on petition of any party, including the Director or the Director's representative, subject to such other requirements as may be imposed.</P>
          <P>(b) Any petition under this section will not stay a disciplinary proceeding unless ordered by the Commissioner or an administrative law judge.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBJGRP>
    </PART>
    <PART>
      <EAR>Pt. 11</EAR>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">PART 11—REPRESENTATION OF OTHERS BEFORE THE UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE</HD>
      <CONTENTS>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart A—General Provisions</HD>
          <SUBJGRP>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">General Information</HD>
            <SECHD>Sec.</SECHD>
            <SECTNO>11.1</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.2</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Director of the Office of Enrollment and Discipline.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.3</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Suspension of rules.</SUBJECT>
          </SUBJGRP>
        </SUBPART>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart B—Recognition To Practice Before the USPTO</HD>
          <SUBJGRP>
            <HD SOURCE="HED">Patents, Trademarks, and Other Non-Patent Law</HD>
            <SECTNO>11.4</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>[Reserved]</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.5</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Register of attorneys and agents in patent matters.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.6</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Registration of attorneys and agents.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.7</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Requirements for registration.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.8</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Oath and registration fee.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.9</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Limited recognition in patent matters.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.10</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Restrictions on practice in patent matters.</SUBJECT>
            <SECTNO>11.11</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Notification.</SUBJECT>
          </SUBJGRP>
        </SUBPART>
      </CONTENTS>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>5 U.S.C. 500, 15 U.S.C. 1123, 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2)(D), 32.</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>69 FR 35452, June 24, 2004, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart A—General Provisions</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">General Information</HD>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.1</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
            <P>This part governs solely the practice of patent, trademark, and other law before the United States Patent and Trademark Office. Nothing in this part shall be construed to preempt the authority of each State to regulate the practice of law, except to the extent necessary for the United States Patent and Trademark Office to accomplish its Federal objectives. Unless otherwise clear from the context, the following definitions apply to this part:</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Attorney</E> or <E T="03">lawyer</E> means an individual who is a member in good standing of the highest court of any State, including an individual who is in good standing of the highest court of one State and under an order of any court <PRTPAGE P="361"/>or Federal agency suspending, enjoining, restraining, disbarring or otherwise restricting the attorney from practice before the bar of another State or Federal agency. A <E T="03">non-lawyer</E> means a person or entity who is not an attorney or lawyer.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Belief</E> or <E T="03">believes</E> means that the person involved actually supposed the fact in question to be true. A person's belief may be inferred from circumstances.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Conviction</E> or <E T="03">convicted</E> means any confession to a crime; a verdict or judgment finding a person guilty of a crime; any entered plea, including <E T="03">nolo contendre</E> or Alford plea, to a crime; or receipt of deferred adjudication (whether judgment or sentence has been entered or not) for an accused or pled crime.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Crime</E> means any offense declared to be a felony or misdemeanor by Federal or State law in the jurisdiction where the act occurs.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Data sheet</E> means a form used to collect the name, address, and telephone information from individuals recognized to practice before the Office in patent matters.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Fiscal year</E> means the time period from October 1st through the ensuing September 30th.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Fraud</E> or <E T="03">fraudulent</E> means conduct having a purpose to deceive and not merely negligent misrepresentation or failure to apprise another of relevant information.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Good moral character and reputation</E> means the possession of honesty and truthfulness, trustworthiness and reliability, and a professional commitment to the legal process and the administration of justice, as well as the condition of being regarded as possessing such qualities.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Knowingly,</E>
              <E T="03">known,</E> or <E T="03">knows</E> means actual knowledge of the fact in question. A person's knowledge may be inferred from circumstances.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Matter</E> means any litigation, administrative proceeding, lobbying activity, application, claim, investigation, controversy, arrest, charge, accusation, contract, negotiation, estate or family relations practice issue, request for a ruling or other determination, or any other matter covered by the conflict of interest rules of the appropriate Government entity.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">OED</E> means the Office of Enrollment and Discipline.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">OED Director</E> means the Director of the Office of Enrollment and Discipline.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">OED Director's representatives</E> means attorneys within the USPTO Office of General Counsel who act as representatives of the OED Director.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Office</E> means the United States Patent and Trademark Office.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Practitioner</E> means:</P>
            <P>(1) An attorney or agent registered to practice before the Office in patent matters,</P>
            <P>(2) An individual authorized under 5 U.S.C. 500(b) or otherwise as provided by § 10.14(b), (c), and (e) of this subchapter, to practice before the Office in trademark matters or other non-patent matters, or</P>
            <P>(3) An individual authorized to practice before the Office in a patent case or matters under § 11.9(a) or (b).</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Proceeding before the Office</E> means an application for patent, an application for reissue, a reexamination, a protest, a public use matter, an <E T="03">inter partes</E> patent matter, correction of a patent, correction of inventorship, an application to register a trademark, an <E T="03">inter partes</E> trademark matter, an appeal, a petition, and any other matter that is pending before the Office.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Reasonable</E> or <E T="03">reasonably</E> when used in relation to conduct by a practitioner means the conduct of a reasonably prudent and competent practitioner.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Registration</E> means registration to practice before the Office in patent proceedings.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Roster</E> means a list of individuals who have been registered as either a patent attorney or patent agent.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Significant evidence of rehabilitation</E> means satisfactory evidence that is significantly more probable than not that there will be no recurrence in the foreseeable future of the practitioner's prior disability or addiction.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">State</E> means any of the 50 states of the United States of America, the District of Columbia, and other territories and possessions of the United States of America.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Substantial</E> when used in reference to degree or extent means a material matter of clear and weighty importance.<PRTPAGE P="362"/>
            </P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">Suspend</E> or <E T="03">suspension</E> means a temporary debarring from practice before the Office or other jurisdiction.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">United States</E> means the United States of America, and the territories and possessions the United States of America.</P>
            <P>
              <E T="03">USPTO Director</E> means the Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, or an employee of the Office delegated authority to act for the Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office in matters arising under this part.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.2</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Director of the Office of Enrollment and Discipline.</SUBJECT>
            <P>(a) <E T="03">Appointment.</E> The USPTO Director shall appoint a Director of the Office of Enrollment and Discipline (OED Director). In the event of the absence of the OED Director or a vacancy in the office of the OED Director, or in the event that the OED Director recuses himself or herself from a case, the USPTO Director may designate an employee of the Office to serve as acting OED Director. The OED Director and any acting OED Director shall be an active member in good standing of the bar of a State.</P>
            <P>(b) <E T="03">Duties.</E> The OED Director shall:</P>
            <P>(1) Supervise staff as may be necessary for the performance of the OED Director's duties.</P>
            <P>(2) Receive and act upon applications for registration, prepare and grade the examination provided for in § 11.7(b), maintain the register provided for in § 11.5, and perform such other duties in connection with enrollment and recognition of attorneys and agents as may be necessary.</P>
            <P>(3) Conduct investigations into the moral character and reputation of any individual seeking to be registered as an attorney or agent, or of any individual seeking limited recognition, deny registration or recognition of individuals failing to demonstrate possession of good moral character and reputation, and perform such other duties in connection with enrollment matters and investigations as may be necessary.</P>
            <P>(4) The Director shall conduct investigations into possible violations by practitioners of Disciplinary Rules, with the consent of the Committee on Discipline initiate disciplinary proceedings under § 10.132(b) of this subchapter, and perform such other duties in connection with investigations and disciplinary proceedings as may be necessary.</P>
            <P>(5)-(7) [Reserved]</P>
            <P>(c) <E T="03">Petition to OED Director.</E> Any petition from any action or requirement of the staff of OED reporting to the OED Director shall be taken to the OED Director. Any such petition not filed within sixty days from the mailing date of the action or notice from which relief is requested will be dismissed as untimely. The filing of a petition will not stay the period for taking other action which may be running, or stay other proceedings. A final decision by the OED Director may be reviewed in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (d) of this section.</P>
            <P>(d) <E T="03">Review of OED Director's decision.</E> An individual dissatisfied with a final decision of the OED Director, except for a decision dismissing a complaint or closing an investigation, may seek review of the decision upon petition to the USPTO Director accompanied by payment of the fee set forth in § 1.21(a)(5)(ii) of this subchapter. A decision dismissing a complaint or closing an investigation is not subject to review by petition. Any petition not filed within sixty days from the mailing date of the final decision of the OED Director will be dismissed as untimely. Any petition shall be limited to the facts of record. Briefs or memoranda, if any, in support of the petition shall accompany or be embodied therein. The USPTO Director in deciding the petition will consider no new evidence. Copies of documents already of record before the OED Director need not be submitted with the petition. No oral hearing on the petition will be held except when considered necessary by the USPTO Director. Any request for reconsideration of the decision of the USPTO Director will be dismissed as untimely if not filed within thirty days after the mailing date of said decision. If any request for reconsideration is filed, the decision on reconsideration shall be the final agency action.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <PRTPAGE P="363"/>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.3</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Suspension of rules.</SUBJECT>

            <P>In an extraordinary situation, when justice requires, any requirement of the regulations of this part which is not a requirement of statute may be suspended or waived by the USPTO Director or the designee of the USPTO Director, <E T="03">sua sponte</E> or on petition of any party, including the OED Director or the OED Director's representative, subject to such other requirements as may be imposed.</P>
          </SECTION>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart B—Recognition To Practice Before the USPTO</HD>
        <SUBJGRP>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Patents, Trademarks, and Other Non-Patent Law</HD>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.4</SECTNO>
            <RESERVED>[Reserved]</RESERVED>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.5</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Register of attorneys and agents in patent matters.</SUBJECT>
            <P>A register of attorneys and agents is kept in the Office on which are entered the names of all individuals recognized as entitled to represent applicants having prospective or immediate business before the Office in the preparation and prosecution of patent applications. Registration in the Office under the provisions of this part shall entitle the individuals so registered to practice before the Office only in patent matters.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.6</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Registration of attorneys and agents.</SUBJECT>
            <P>(a) <E T="03">Attorneys</E>. Any citizen of the United States who is an attorney and who fulfills the requirements of this part may be registered as a patent attorney to practice before the Office. When appropriate, any alien who is an attorney, who lawfully resides in the United States, and who fulfills the requirements of this part may be registered as a patent attorney to practice before the Office, provided that such registration is not inconsistent with the terms upon which the alien was admitted to, and resides in, the United States and further provided that the alien may remain registered only:</P>
            <P>(1) If the alien continues to lawfully reside in the United States and registration does not become inconsistent with the terms upon which the alien continues to lawfully reside in the United States, or</P>

            <P>(2) If the alien ceases to reside in the United States, the alien is qualified to be registered under paragraph (c) of this section. <E T="03">See also</E> § 11.9(b).</P>
            <P>(b) <E T="03">Agents</E>. Any citizen of the United States who is not an attorney, and who fulfills the requirements of this part may be registered as a patent agent to practice before the Office. When appropriate, any alien who is not an attorney, who lawfully resides in the United States, and who fulfills the requirements of this part may be registered as a patent agent to practice before the Office, provided that such registration is not inconsistent with the terms upon which the alien was admitted to, and resides in, the United States, and further provided that the alien may remain registered only:</P>
            <P>(1) If the alien continues to lawfully reside in the United States and registration does not become inconsistent with the terms upon which the alien continues to lawfully reside in the United States or</P>

            <P>(2) If the alien ceases to reside in the United States, the alien is qualified to be registered under paragraph (c) of this section. <E T="03">See also</E> § 11.9(b).</P>
            <P>(c) <E T="03">Foreigners</E>. Any foreigner not a resident of the United States who shall file proof to the satisfaction of the OED Director that he or she is registered and in good standing before the patent office of the country in which he or she resides and practices, and who is possessed of the qualifications stated in § 11.7, may be registered as a patent agent to practice before the Office for the limited purpose of presenting and prosecuting patent applications of applicants located in such country, provided that the patent office of such country allows substantially reciprocal privileges to those admitted to practice before the Office. Registration as a patent agent under this paragraph shall continue only during the period that the conditions specified in this paragraph obtain. Upon notice by the patent office of such country that a patent agent registered under this section is no longer registered or no longer in good standing before the patent office of such country, and absent a showing of cause why his or her name should not be removed from the register, the OED Director <PRTPAGE P="364"/>shall promptly remove the name of the patent agent from the register and publish the fact of removal. Upon ceasing to reside in such country, the patent agent registered under this section is no longer qualified to be registered under this section, and the OED Director shall promptly remove the name of the patent agent from the register and publish the fact of removal.</P>
            <P>(d) <E T="03">Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences matters</E>. For action by a person who is not registered in a proceeding before the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, see § 41.5(a) of this title.</P>
            <CITA>[69 FR 35452, June 24, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004]</CITA>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.7</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Requirements for registration.</SUBJECT>
            <P>(a) No individual will be registered to practice before the Office unless he or she has:</P>
            <P>(1) Applied to the USPTO Director in writing by completing an application for registration form supplied by the OED Director and furnishing all requested information and material; and</P>
            <P>(2) Established to the satisfaction of the OED Director that he or she:</P>
            <P>(i) Possesses good moral character and reputation;</P>
            <P>(ii) Possesses the legal, scientific, and technical qualifications necessary for him or her to render applicants valuable service; and</P>
            <P>(iii) Is competent to advise and assist patent applicants in the presentation and prosecution of their applications before the Office.</P>
            <P>(b)(1) To enable the OED Director to determine whether an individual has the qualifications specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the individual shall:</P>
            <P>(i) File a complete application for registration each time admission to the registration examination is requested. A complete application for registration includes:</P>
            <P>(A) An application for registration form supplied by the OED Director wherein all requested information and supporting documents are furnished,</P>
            <P>(B) Payment of the fees required by § 1.21(a)(1) of this subchapter,</P>
            <P>(C) Satisfactory proof of scientific and technical qualifications, and</P>
            <P>(D) For aliens, provide proof that recognition is not inconsistent with the terms of their visa or entry into the United States;</P>
            <P>(ii) Pass the registration examination, unless the taking and passing of the examination is waived as provided in paragraph (d) of this section. Unless examination is waived pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section, each individual seeking registration must take and pass the registration examination to enable the OED Director to determine whether the individual possesses the legal and competence qualifications specified in paragraphs (a)(2)(ii) and (a)(2)(iii) of this section. An individual failing the examination may, upon receipt of notice of failure from OED, reapply for admission to the examination. An individual failing the examination must wait thirty days after the date the individual last took the examination before retaking the examination. An individual reapplying shall:</P>
            <P>(A) File a completed application for registration form wherein all requested information and supporting documents are furnished,</P>
            <P>(B) Pay the fees required by § 1.21(a)(1) of this subchapter, and</P>
            <P>(C) For aliens, provide proof that recognition is not inconsistent with the terms of their visa or entry into the United States; and</P>
            <P>(iii) Provide satisfactory proof of possession of good moral character and reputation.</P>
            <P>(2) An individual failing to file a complete application for registration will not be admitted to the examination and will be notified of the incompleteness. Applications for registration that are incomplete as originally submitted will be considered only when they have been completed and received by OED, provided that this occurs within sixty days of the mailing date of the notice of incompleteness. Thereafter, a new and complete application for registration must be filed. Only an individual approved as satisfying the requirements of paragraphs (b)(1)(i)(A), (b)(1)(i)(B), (b)(1)(i)(C) and (b)(1)(i)(D) of this section may be admitted to the examination.</P>

            <P>(3) If an individual does not reapply until more than one year after the mailing date of a notice of failure, that <PRTPAGE P="365"/>individual must again comply with paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section.</P>
            <P>(c) Each individual seeking registration is responsible for updating all information and answers submitted in or with the application for registration based upon anything occurring between the date the application for registration is signed by the individual, and the date he or she is registered or recognized to practice before the Office in patent matters. The update shall be filed within thirty days after the date of the occasion that necessitates the update.</P>
            <P>(d) <E T="03">Waiver of the Registration Examination for Former Office Employees. (1) Former patent examiners who by July 26, 2004, had not actively served four years in the patent examining corps, and were serving in the corps at the time of their separation</E>. The OED Director may waive the taking of a registration examination in the case of any individual meeting the requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C) of this section who is a former patent examiner but by July 26, 2004, had not served four years in the patent examining corps, if the individual demonstrates that he or she:</P>
            <P>(i) Actively served in the patent examining corps of the Office and was serving in the corps at the time of separation from the Office;</P>
            <P>(ii) Received a certificate of legal competency and negotiation authority;</P>
            <P>(iii) After receiving the certificate of legal competency and negotiation authority, was rated at least fully successful in each quality performance element of his or her performance plan for the last two complete fiscal years as a patent examiner; and</P>
            <P>(iv) Was not under an oral or written warning regarding the quality performance elements at the time of separation from the patent examining corps.</P>
            <P>(2) <E T="03">Former patent examiners who on July 26, 2004, had actively served four years in the patent examining corps, and were serving in the corps at the time of their separation</E>. The OED Director may waive the taking of a registration examination in the case of any individual meeting the requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C) of this section who is a former patent examiner and by July 26, 2004, had served four years in the patent examining corps, if the individual demonstrates that he or she:</P>
            <P>(i) Actively served for at least four years in the patent examining corps of the Office by July 26, 2004, and was serving in the corps at the time of separation from the Office;</P>
            <P>(ii) Was rated at least fully successful in each quality performance element of his or her performance plan for the last two complete fiscal years as a patent examiner in the Office; and</P>
            <P>(iii) Was not under an oral or written warning regarding the quality performance elements at the time of separation from the patent examining corps.</P>
            <P>(3) <E T="03">Certain former Office employees who were not serving in the patent examining corps upon their separation from the Office</E>. The OED Director may waive the taking of a registration examination in the case of a former Office employee meeting the requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C) of this section who by petition demonstrates possession of the necessary legal qualifications to render to patent applicants and others valuable service and assistance in the preparation and prosecution of their applications or other business before the Office by showing that he or she has:</P>
            <P>(i) Exhibited comprehensive knowledge of patent law equivalent to that shown by passing the registration examination as a result of having been in a position of responsibility in the Office in which he or she:</P>
            <P>(A) Provided substantial guidance on patent examination policy, including the development of rule or procedure changes, patent examination guidelines, changes to the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure, development of training or testing materials for the patent examining corps, or development of materials for the registration examination or continuing legal education; or</P>
            <P>(B) Represented the Office in patent cases before Federal courts; and</P>

            <P>(ii) Was rated at least fully successful in each quality performance element of his or her performance plan for said position for the last two complete rating periods in the Office, and was not under an oral or written warning regarding such performance elements at the time of separation from the Office.<PRTPAGE P="366"/>
            </P>
            <P>(4) To be eligible for consideration for waiver, an individual formerly employed by the Office within the scope of one of paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(2) or (d)(3) of this section must file a complete application for registration and pay the fee required by § 1.21(a)(1)(i) of this subchapter within two years of the individual's date of separation from the Office. All other individuals formerly employed by the Office, including former examiners, filing an application for registration or fee more than two years after separation from the Office, are required to take and pass the registration examination. The individual or former examiner must pay the examination fee required by § 1.21(a)(1)(ii) of this subchapter within thirty days after notice of non-waiver.</P>
            <P>(e) <E T="03">Examination results</E>. Notification of the examination results is final. Within sixty days of the mailing date of a notice of failure, the individual is entitled to inspect, but not copy, the questions and answers he or she incorrectly answered. Review will be under supervision. No notes may be taken during such review. Substantive review of the answers or questions may not be pursued by petition for regrade. An individual who failed the examination has the right to retake the examination an unlimited number of times upon payment of the fees required by § 1.21(a)(1)(i) and (ii) of this subchapter, and a fee charged by a commercial entity administering the examination.</P>
            <P>(f) <E T="03">Application for reciprocal recognition</E>. An individual seeking reciprocal recognition under § 11.6(c), in addition to satisfying the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, and the provisions of § 11.8(c), shall pay the application fee required by § 1.21(a)(1)(i) of this subchapter upon filing an application for registration.</P>
            <P>(g) <E T="03">Investigation of good moral character and reputation</E>. (1) Every individual seeking recognition shall answer all questions in the application for registration and request(s) for comments issued by OED; disclose all relevant facts, dates and information; and provide verified copies of documents relevant to his or her good moral character and reputation. An individual who is an attorney shall submit a certified copy of each of his or her State bar applications and moral character determinations, if available.</P>
            <P>(2)(i) If the OED Director receives information from any source that reflects adversely on the good moral character or reputation of an individual seeking registration or recognition, the OED Director shall conduct an investigation into the good moral character and reputation of that individual. The investigation will be conducted after the individual has passed the registration examination, or after the registration examination has been waived for the individual, as applicable. An individual failing to timely answer questions or respond to an inquiry by OED shall be deemed to have withdrawn his or her application, and shall be required to reapply, pass the examination, and otherwise satisfy all the requirements of this section. No individual shall be certified for registration or recognition by the OED Director until, to the satisfaction of the OED Director, the individual demonstrates his or her possession of good moral character and reputation.</P>
            <P>(ii) The OED Director, in considering an application for registration by an attorney, may accept a State bar's character determination as meeting the requirements set forth in paragraph (g) of this section if, after review, the Office finds no substantial discrepancy between the information provided with his or her application for registration and the State bar application and moral character determination, provided that acceptance is not inconsistent with other rules and the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2)(D).</P>
            <P>(h) <E T="03">Good moral character and reputation</E>. Evidence showing lack of good moral character and reputation may include, but is not limited to, conviction of a felony or a misdemeanor identified in paragraph (h)(1) of this section, drug or alcohol abuse; lack of candor; suspension or disbarment on ethical grounds from a State bar; and resignation from a State bar while under investigation.</P>
            <P>(1) <E T="03">Conviction of felony or misdemeanor</E>. An individual who has been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, breach of trust, interference with the administration of justice, false swearing, misrepresentation, <PRTPAGE P="367"/>fraud, deceit, bribery, extortion, misappropriation, theft, or conspiracy to commit any felony or misdemeanor, is presumed not to be of good moral character and reputation in the absence of a pardon or a satisfactory showing of reform and rehabilitation, and shall file with his or her application for registration the fees required by § 1.21(a)(1)(ii) and (a)(10) of this subchapter. The OED Director shall determine whether individuals convicted of said felony or misdemeanor provided satisfactory proof of reform and rehabilitation.</P>
            <P>(i) An individual who has been convicted of a felony or a misdemeanor identified in paragraph (h)(1) of this section shall not be eligible to apply for registration during the time of any sentence (including confinement or commitment to imprisonment), deferred adjudication, and period of probation or parole as a result of the conviction, and for a period of two years after the date of completion of the sentence, deferred adjudication, and period of probation or parole, whichever is later.</P>
            <P>(ii) The following presumptions apply to the determination of good moral character and reputation of an individual convicted of said felony or misdemeanor:</P>
            <P>(A) The court record or docket entry of conviction is conclusive evidence of guilt in the absence of a pardon or a satisfactory showing of reform or rehabilitation; and</P>
            <P>(B) An individual convicted of a felony or any misdemeanor identified in paragraph (h)(1) of this section is conclusively deemed not to have good moral character and reputation, and shall not be eligible to apply for registration for a period of two years after completion of the sentence, deferred adjudication, and period of probation or parole, whichever is later.</P>
            <P>(iii) The individual, upon applying for registration, shall provide satisfactory evidence that he or she is of good moral character and reputation.</P>
            <P>(iv) Upon proof that a conviction has been set aside or reversed, the individual shall be eligible to file a complete application for registration and the fee required by § 1.21(a)(1)(ii) of this subchapter and, upon passing the registration examination, have the OED Director determine, in accordance with paragraph (h)(1) of this section, whether, absent the conviction, the individual possesses good moral character and reputation.</P>
            <P>(2) <E T="03">Good moral character and reputation involving drug or alcohol abuse</E>. An individual's record is reviewed as a whole to see if there is a drug or alcohol abuse issue. An individual appearing to abuse drugs or alcohol may be asked to undergo an evaluation, at the individual's expense, by a qualified professional approved by the OED Director. In instances where, before an investigation commences, there is evidence of a present abuse or an individual has not established a record of recovery, the OED Director may request the individual to withdraw his or her application, and require the individual to satisfactorily demonstrate that he or she is complying with treatment and undergoing recovery.</P>
            <P>(3) <E T="03">Moral character and reputation involving lack of candor</E>. An individual's lack of candor in disclosing facts bearing on or relevant to issues concerning good moral character and reputation when completing the application or any time thereafter may be found to be cause to deny registration on moral character and reputation grounds.</P>
            <P>(4) <E T="03">Moral character and reputation involving suspension, disbarment, or resignation from a profession</E>. (i) An individual who has been disbarred or suspended from practice of law or other profession, or has resigned in lieu of a disciplinary proceeding (excluded or disbarred on consent) shall be ineligible to apply for registration as follows:</P>
            <P>(A) An individual who has been disbarred from practice of law or other profession, or has resigned in lieu of a disciplinary proceeding (excluded or disbarred on consent) shall be ineligible to apply for registration for a period of five years from the date of disbarment or resignation.</P>

            <P>(B) An individual who has been suspended on ethical grounds from the practice of law or other profession shall be ineligible to apply for registration until expiration of the period of suspension.<PRTPAGE P="368"/>
            </P>
            <P>(C) An individual who was not only disbarred, suspended or resigned in lieu of a disciplinary proceeding, but also convicted in a court of a felony, or of a crime involving moral turpitude or breach of trust, shall be ineligible to apply for registration until the conditions in paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(4) of this section are fully satisfied.</P>
            <P>(ii) An individual who has been disbarred or suspended, or who resigned in lieu of a disciplinary proceeding shall file an application for registration and the fees required by § 1.21(a)(1)(ii) and (a)(10) of this subchapter; provide a full and complete copy of the proceedings that led to the disbarment, suspension, or resignation; and provide satisfactory proof that he or she possesses good moral character and reputation. The following presumptions shall govern the determination of good moral character and reputation of an individual who has been licensed to practice law or other profession in any jurisdiction and has been disbarred, suspended on ethical grounds, or allowed to resign in lieu of discipline, in that jurisdiction:</P>

            <P>(A) A copy of the record resulting in disbarment, suspension or resignation is <E T="03">prima facie</E> evidence of the matters contained in the record, and the imposition of disbarment or suspension, or the acceptance of the resignation of the individual shall be deemed conclusive that the individual has committed professional misconduct.</P>
            <P>(B) The individual is ineligible for registration and is deemed not to have good moral character and reputation during the period of the imposed discipline.</P>
            <P>(iii) The only defenses available with regard to an underlying disciplinary matter resulting in disbarment, suspension on ethical grounds, or resignation in lieu of a disciplinary proceeding are set out below, and must be shown to the satisfaction of the OED Director:</P>
            <P>(A) The procedure in the disciplinary court was so lacking in notice or opportunity to be heard as to constitute a deprivation of due process;</P>
            <P>(B) There was such infirmity of proof establishing the misconduct as to give rise to the clear conviction that the Office could not, consistently with its duty, accept as final the conclusion on that subject; or</P>
            <P>(C) The finding of lack of good moral character and reputation by the Office would result in grave injustice.</P>
            <P>(i) <E T="03">Factors that may be taken into consideration when evaluating rehabilitation of an individual seeking a moral character and reputation determination</E>. The factors enumerated below are guidelines to assist the OED Director in determining whether an individual has demonstrated rehabilitation from an act of misconduct or moral turpitude. The factors include:</P>
            <P>(1) The nature of the act of misconduct, including whether it involved moral turpitude, whether there were aggravating or mitigating circumstances, and whether the activity was an isolated event or part of a pattern;</P>
            <P>(2) The age and education of the individual at the time of the misconduct and the age and education of the individual at the present time;</P>
            <P>(3) The length of time that has passed between the misconduct and the present, absent any involvement in any further acts of moral turpitude, the amount of time and the extent of rehabilitation being dependent upon the nature and seriousness of the act of misconduct under consideration;</P>
            <P>(4) Restitution by the individual to any person who suffered monetary losses through acts or omissions of the individual;</P>
            <P>(5) Expungement of a conviction;</P>
            <P>(6) Successful completion or early discharge from probation or parole;</P>
            <P>(7) Abstinence from the use of controlled substances or alcohol for not less than two years if the specific misconduct was attributable in part to the use of a controlled substance or alcohol, where abstinence may be demonstrated by, but is not necessarily limited to, enrolling in and complying with a self-help or professional treatment program;</P>

            <P>(8) If the specific misconduct was attributable in part to a medically recognized mental disease, disorder or illness, proof that the individual sought professional assistance, and complied with the treatment program prescribed <PRTPAGE P="369"/>by the professional, and submitted letters from the treating psychiatrist/psychologist verifying that the medically recognized mental disease, disorder or illness will not impede the individual's ability to competently practice before the Office;</P>
            <P>(9) Payment of the fine imposed in connection with any criminal conviction;</P>
            <P>(10) Correction of behavior responsible in some degree for the misconduct;</P>
            <P>(11) Significant and conscientious involvement in programs designed to provide social benefits or to ameliorate social problems; and</P>
            <P>(12) Change in attitude from that which existed at the time of the act of misconduct in question as evidenced by any or all of the following:</P>
            <P>(i) Statements of the individual;</P>
            <P>(ii) Statements from persons familiar with the individual's previous misconduct and with subsequent attitudes and behavioral patterns;</P>
            <P>(iii) Statements from probation or parole officers or law enforcement officials as to the individual's social adjustments; and</P>
            <P>(iv) Statements from persons competent to testify with regard to neuropsychiatry or emotional disturbances.</P>
            <P>(j) <E T="03">Notice to Show Cause.</E> The OED Director shall inquire into the good moral character and reputation of an individual seeking registration, providing the individual with the opportunity to create a record on which a decision is made. If, following inquiry and consideration of the record, the OED Director is of the opinion that the individual seeking registration has not satisfactorily established that he or she possesses good moral character and reputation, the OED Director shall issue to the individual a notice to show cause why the individual's application for registration should not be denied.</P>
            <P>(1) The individual shall be given no less than ten days from the date of the notice to reply. The notice shall be given by certified mail at the address appearing on the application if the address is in the United States, and by any other reasonable means if the address is outside the United States.</P>
            <P>(2) Following receipt of the individual's response, or in the absence of a response, the OED Director shall consider the individual's response, if any, and the record, and determine whether, in the OED Director's opinion, the individual has sustained his or her burden of satisfactorily demonstrating that he or she possesses good moral character and reputation.</P>
            <P>(k) <E T="03">Reapplication for registration.</E> An individual who has been refused registration for lack of good moral character or reputation may reapply for registration two years after the date of the decision, unless a shorter period is otherwise ordered by the USPTO Director. An individual, who has been notified that he or she is under investigation for good moral character and reputation may elect to withdraw his or her application for registration, and may reapply for registration two years after the date of withdrawal. Upon reapplication for registration, the individual shall pay the fees required by § 1.21(a)(1)(ii) and (a)(10) of this subchapter, and has the burden of showing to the satisfaction of the OED Director his or her possession of good moral character and reputation as prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section. Upon reapplication for registration, the individual also shall complete successfully the examination prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section, even though the individual has previously passed a registration examination.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.8</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Oath and registration fee.</SUBJECT>
            <P>(a) After an individual passes the examination, or the examination is waived, the OED Director shall promptly publish a solicitation for information concerning the individual's good moral character and reputation. The solicitation shall include the individual's name, and business or communication postal address.</P>

            <P>(b) An individual shall not be registered as an attorney under § 11.6(a), registered as an agent under § 11.6(b) or (c), or granted limited recognition under § 11.9(b) unless within two years of the mailing date of a notice of passing registration examination or of waiver of the examination the individual files with the OED Director a <PRTPAGE P="370"/>completed Data Sheet, an oath or declaration prescribed by the USPTO Director, and the registration fee set forth in § 1.21(a)(2) of this subchapter. An individual seeking registration as an attorney under § 11.6(a) must provide a certificate of good standing of the bar of the highest court of a State that is no more than six months old.</P>
            <P>(c) An individual who does not comply with the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section within the two-year period will be required to retake the registration examination.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.9</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Limited recognition in patent matters.</SUBJECT>
            <P>(a) Any individual not registered under § 11.6 may, upon a showing of circumstances which render it necessary or justifiable, and that the individual is of good moral character and reputation, be given limited recognition by the OED Director to prosecute as attorney or agent a specified patent application or specified patent applications. Limited recognition under this paragraph shall not extend further than the application or applications specified. Limited recognition shall not be granted while individuals who have passed the examination or for whom the examination has been waived are awaiting registration to practice before the Office in patent matters.</P>
            <P>(b) A nonimmigrant alien residing in the United States and fulfilling the provisions of § 11.7(a) and (b) may be granted limited recognition if the nonimmigrant alien is authorized by the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services to be employed or trained in the United States in the capacity of representing a patent applicant by presenting or prosecuting a patent application. Limited recognition shall be granted for a period consistent with the terms of authorized employment or training. Limited recognition shall not be granted or extended to a non-United States citizen residing abroad. If granted, limited recognition shall automatically expire upon the nonimmigrant alien's departure from the United States.</P>
            <P>(c) An individual not registered under § 11.6 may, if appointed by an applicant, prosecute an international patent application only before the United States International Searching Authority and the United States International Preliminary Examining Authority, provided that the individual has the right to practice before the national office with which the international application is filed as provided in PCT Art. 49, Rule 90 and § 1.455 of this subchapter, or before the International Bureau when the USPTO is acting as Receiving Office pursuant to PCT Rules 83.1 bis and 90.1.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.10</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Restrictions on practice in patent matters.</SUBJECT>
            <P>(a) Only practitioners who are registered under § 11.6 or individuals given limited recognition under § 11.9(a) or (b) are permitted to prosecute patent applications of others before the Office; or represent others in any proceedings before the Office.</P>
            <P>(b) <E T="03">Post employment agreement of former Office employee.</E> No individual who has served in the patent examining corps or elsewhere in the Office may practice before the Office after termination of his or her service, unless he or she signs a written undertaking agreeing:</P>
            <P>(1) To not knowingly act as agent or attorney for, or otherwise represent, or assist in any manner the representation of, any other person:</P>
            <P>(i) Before the Office,</P>
            <P>(ii) In connection with any particular patent or patent application,</P>
            <P>(iii) In which said employee participated personally and substantially as an employee of the Office; and</P>
            <P>(2) To not knowingly act within two years after terminating employment by the Office as agent or attorney for, or otherwise represent, or assist in any manner the representation of any other person:</P>
            <P>(i) Before the Office,</P>
            <P>(ii) In connection with any particular patent or patent application,</P>
            <P>(iii) If such patent or patent application was pending under the employee's official responsibility as an officer or employee within a period of one year prior to the termination of such responsibility.</P>

            <P>(3) The words and phrases in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section are construed as follows:<PRTPAGE P="371"/>
            </P>
            <P>(i) <E T="03">Represent</E> and <E T="03">representation</E> mean acting as patent attorney or patent agent or other representative in any appearance before the Office, or communicating with an employee of the Office with intent to influence.</P>
            <P>(ii) <E T="03">Assist in any manner</E> means aid or help another person on a particular patent or patent application involving representation.</P>
            <P>(iii) <E T="03">Particular patent or patent application</E> means any patent or patent application, including, but not limited to, a provisional, substitute, international, continuation, divisional, continuation-in-part, or reissue patent application, as well as any protest, reexamination, petition, appeal, or interference based on the patent or patent application.</P>
            <P>(iv) <E T="03">Participate personally and substantially.</E> (A) Basic requirements. The restrictions of § 11.10(a)(1) apply only to those patents and patent applications in which a former Office employee had “personal and substantial participation,” exercised “through decision, approval, disapproval, recommendation, the rendering of advice, investigation or otherwise.” To <E T="03">participate personally</E> means directly, and includes the participation of a subordinate when actually directed by the former Office employee in the patent or patent application. <E T="03">Substantially</E> means that the employee's involvement must be of significance to the matter, or form a basis for a reasonable appearance of such significance. It requires more than official responsibility, knowledge, perfunctory involvement, or involvement on an administrative or peripheral issue. A finding of substantiality should be based not only on the effort devoted to a patent or patent application, but also on the importance of the effort. While a series of peripheral involvements may be insubstantial, the single act of approving or participation in a critical step may be substantial. It is essential that the participation be related to a “particular patent or patent application.” (<E T="03">See</E> paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section.)</P>
            <P>(B) Participation on ancillary matters. An Office employee's participation on subjects not directly involving the substantive merits of a patent or patent application may not be “substantial,” even if it is time-consuming. An employee whose official responsibility is the review of a patent or patent application solely for compliance with administrative control or budgetary considerations and who reviews a particular patent or patent application for such a purpose should not be regarded as having participated substantially in the patent or patent application, except when such considerations also are the subject of the employee's proposed representation.</P>

            <P>(C) Role of official responsibility in determining substantial participation. <E T="03">Official responsibility</E> is defined in paragraph (b)(3)(v) of this section. “Personal and substantial participation” is different from “official responsibility.” One's responsibility may, however, play a role in determining the “substantiality” of an Office employee's participation.</P>
            <P>(v) <E T="03">Official responsibility</E> means the direct administrative or operating authority, whether intermediate or final, and either exercisable alone or with others, and either personally or through subordinates, to approve, disapprove, or otherwise direct Government actions.</P>
            <P>(A) Determining official responsibility. Ordinarily, those areas assigned by statute, regulation, Executive Order, job description, or delegation of authority determine the scope of an employee's “official responsibility”. All particular matters under consideration in the Office are under the “official responsibility” of the Director of the Office, and each is under that of any intermediate supervisor having responsibility for an employee who actually participates in the patent or patent application within the scope of his or her duties. A patent examiner would have “official responsibility” for the patent applications assigned to him or her.</P>
            <P>(B) Ancillary matters and official responsibility. <E T="03">Administrative</E> authority as used in paragraph (v) of this section means authority for planning, organizing and controlling a patent or patent application rather than authority to review or make decisions on ancillary aspects of a patent or patent application such as the regularity of <PRTPAGE P="372"/>budgeting procedures, public or community relations aspects, or equal employment opportunity considerations. Responsibility for such an ancillary consideration does not constitute official responsibility for the particular patent or patent application, except when such a consideration is also the subject of the employee's proposed representation.</P>
            <P>(C) Duty to inquire. In order for a former employee, <E T="03">e.g.</E>, former patent examiner, to be barred from representing or assisting in representing another as to a particular patent or patent application, he or she need not have known, while employed by the Office, that the patent or patent application was pending under his or her official responsibility. The former employee has a reasonable duty of inquiry to learn whether the patent or patent application had been under his or her official responsibility. Ordinarily, a former employee who is asked to represent another on a patent or patent application will become aware of facts sufficient to suggest the relationship of the prior matter to his or her former office, <E T="03">e.g.</E>, technology center, group or art unit. If so, he or she is under a duty to make further inquiry. It would be prudent for an employee to maintain a record of only patent application numbers of the applications actually acted upon by decision or recommendation, as well as those applications under the employee's official responsibility which he or she has not acted upon.</P>
            <P>(D) Self-disqualification. A former employee, <E T="03">e.g.</E>, former patent examiner, cannot avoid the restrictions of this section through self-disqualification with respect to a patent or patent application for which he or she otherwise had official responsibility. However, an employee who through self-disqualification does not participate personally and substantially in a particular patent or patent application is not subject to the lifetime restriction of paragraph (b)(1) of this section.</P>
            <P>(vi) <E T="03">Pending</E> means that the matter was in fact referred to or under consideration by persons within the employee's area of official responsibility.</P>
            <P>(4) Measurement of the two-year restriction period. The two-year period under paragraph (b)(2) of this section is measured from the date when the employee's official responsibility in a particular area ends, not from the termination of service in the Office, unless the two occur simultaneously. The prohibition applies to all particular patents or patent applications subject to such official responsibility in the one-year period before termination of such responsibility.</P>
            <P>(c) <E T="03">Former employees of the Office.</E> This section imposes restrictions generally parallel to those imposed in 18 U.S.C. 207(a) and (b)(1). This section, however, does not interpret these statutory provisions or any other post-employment restrictions that may apply to former Office employees, and such former employees should not assume that conduct not prohibited by this section is otherwise permissible. Former employees of the Office, whether or not they are practitioners, are encouraged to contact the Department of Commerce for information concerning applicable post-employment restrictions.</P>
            <P>(d) An employee of the Office may not prosecute or aid in any manner in the prosecution of any patent application before the Office.</P>
            <P>(e) Practice before the Office by Government employees is subject to any applicable conflict of interest laws, regulations or codes of professional responsibility.</P>
          </SECTION>
          <SECTION>
            <SECTNO>§ 11.11</SECTNO>
            <SUBJECT>Notification.</SUBJECT>

            <P>A registered attorney or agent must notify the OED Director of his or her postal address for his or her office, up to three e-mail addresses where he or she receives e-mail, and business telephone number, as well as every change to any of said addresses, or telephone numbers within thirty days of the date of the change. A registered attorney or agent shall, in addition to any notice of change of address and telephone number filed in individual patent applications, separately file written notice of the change of address or telephone number to the OED Director. A registered practitioner who is an attorney in good standing with the bar of the highest court of one or more States shall provide the OED Director with the State bar identification number associated with each membership. The OED Director shall publish from the <PRTPAGE P="373"/>roster a list containing the name, postal business addresses, business telephone number, registration number, and registration status as an attorney or agent of each registered practitioner recognized to practice before the Office in patent cases.</P>
          </SECTION>
        </SUBJGRP>
      </SUBPART>
    </PART>
    <PART>
      <RESERVED>PARTS 15-15a [RESERVED]</RESERVED>
    </PART>
    <PART>
      <EAR>Pt. 41</EAR>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">PART 41—PRACTICE BEFORE THE BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES</HD>
      <CONTENTS>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart A—General Provisions</HD>
          <SECHD>Sec.</SECHD>
          <SECTNO>41.1</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Policy.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.2</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.3</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Petitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.4</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Timeliness.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.5</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Counsel.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.6</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Public availability of Board records.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.7</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Management of the record.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.8</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Mandatory notices.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.9</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action by owner.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.10</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correspondence addresses.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.11</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>
            <E T="03">Ex parte</E> communications in <E T="03">inter partes</E> proceedings.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.12</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Citation of authority.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.20</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Fees.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBPART>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart B—<E T="0714">Ex Parte</E> Appeals</HD>
          <SECTNO>41.30</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.31</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeal to Board.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.33</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amendments and affidavits or other evidence after appeal.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.35</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Jurisdiction over appeal.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.37</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeal brief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.39</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Examiner's answer.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.41</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reply brief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.43</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Examiner's response to reply brief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.47</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oral hearing.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.50</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decisions and other actions by the Board.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.52</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rehearing.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.54</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action following decision.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBPART>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart C—<E T="0714">Inter Partes</E> Appeals</HD>
          <SECTNO>41.60</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.61</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of appeal and cross appeal to Board.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.63</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amendments and affidavits or other evidence after appeal.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.64</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Jurisdiction over appeal in <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.66</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time for filing briefs.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.67</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appellant's brief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.68</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Respondent's brief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.69</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Examiner's answer.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.71</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rebuttal brief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.73</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oral hearing.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.77</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decisions and other actions by the Board.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.79</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rehearing.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.81</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action following decision.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBPART>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart D—Contested Cases</HD>
          <SECTNO>41.100</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of proceeding.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Completion of examination.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.103</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Jurisdiction over involved files.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.104</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conduct of contested case.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.106</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing and service.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.108</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Lead counsel.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.109</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Access to and copies of Office records.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing claim information.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.120</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of basis for relief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.121</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Motions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.122</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oppositions and replies.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.123</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Default filing times.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.124</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oral argument.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.125</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decision on motions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.126</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Arbitration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.127</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Judgment.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.128</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Sanctions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.150</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Discovery.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.151</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Admissibility.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.152</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Applicability of the Federal Rules of Evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.153</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Records of the Office.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.154</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Form of evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.155</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Objection; motion to exclude; motion in limine.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.156</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Compelling testimony and production.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.157</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Taking testimony.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.158</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Expert testimony; tests and data.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBPART>
        <SUBPART>
          <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart E—Patent Interferences</HD>
          <SECTNO>41.200</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Procedure; pendency.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.201</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.202</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Suggesting an interference.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.203</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Declaration.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.204</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of basis for relief.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.205</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Settlement agreements.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.206</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Common interests in the invention.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.207</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Presumptions.</SUBJECT>
          <SECTNO>41.208</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Content of substantive and responsive motions.</SUBJECT>
        </SUBPART>
      </CONTENTS>
      <AUTH>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Authority:</HD>
        <P>35 U.S.C. 2(b)(2), 3(a)(2)(A), 21, 23, 32, 41, 134, 135.</P>
      </AUTH>
      <SOURCE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Source:</HD>
        <P>69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, unless otherwise noted.</P>
      </SOURCE>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart A—General Provisions</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.1</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Policy.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Scope</E>. Part 41 governs proceedings before the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences. Sections 1.1 to 1.36 and 1.181 to 1.183 of this title also apply to practice before the Board, as do other sections of part 1 of this title that are incorporated by reference into part 41.<PRTPAGE P="374"/>
          </P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Construction</E>. The provisions of Part 41 shall be construed to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive resolution of every proceeding before the Board.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Decorum</E>. Each party must act with courtesy and decorum in all proceedings before the Board, including interactions with other parties.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.2</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Unless otherwise clear from the context, the following definitions apply to proceedings under this part:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Affidavit</E> means affidavit, declaration under § 1.68 of this title, or statutory declaration under 28 U.S.C. 1746. A transcript of an <E T="03">ex parte</E> deposition may be used as an affidavit in a contested case.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Board</E> means the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences and includes:</P>
          <P>(1) For a final Board action:</P>
          <P>(i) In an appeal or contested case, a panel of the Board.</P>
          <P>(ii) In a proceeding under § 41.3, the Chief Administrative Patent Judge or another official acting under an express delegation from the Chief Administrative Patent Judge.</P>
          <P>(2) For non-final actions, a Board member or employee acting with the authority of the Board.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Board member</E> means the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Deputy Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the Commissioner for Patents, the Commissioner for Trademarks, and the administrative patent judges.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Contested case</E> means a Board proceeding other than an appeal under 35 U.S.C. 134 or a petition under § 41.3. An appeal in an <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination is not a contested case.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Final</E> means, with regard to a Board action, final for the purposes of judicial review. A decision is final only if:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">In a panel proceeding</E>. The decision is rendered by a panel, disposes of all issues with regard to the party seeking judicial review, and does not indicate that further action is required; and</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">In other proceedings</E>. The decision disposes of all issues or the decision states it is final.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Hearing</E> means consideration of the issues of record. <E T="03">Rehearing</E> means reconsideration.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Office</E> means United States Patent and Trademark Office.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Panel</E> means at least three Board members acting in a panel proceeding.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Panel proceeding</E> means a proceeding in which final action is reserved by statute to at least three Board members, but includes a non-final portion of such a proceeding whether administered by a panel or not.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Party,</E> in this part, means any entity participating in a Board proceeding, other than officers and employees of the Office, including:</P>
          <P>(1) An appellant;</P>
          <P>(2) A participant in a contested case;</P>
          <P>(3) A petitioner; and</P>
          <P>(4) Counsel for any of the above, where context permits.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.3</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Petitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Deciding official</E>. Petitions must be addressed to the Chief Administrative Patent Judge. A panel or an administrative patent judge may certify a question of policy to the Chief Administrative Patent Judge for decision. The Chief Administrative Patent Judge may delegate authority to decide petitions.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Scope</E>. This section covers petitions on matters pending before the Board (§§ 41.35, 41.64, 41.103, and 41.205); otherwise, see §§ 1.181 to 1.183 of this title. The following matters are not subject to petition:</P>
          <P>(1) Issues committed by statute to a panel, and</P>
          <P>(2) In pending contested cases, procedural issues. See § 41.121(a)(3) and § 41.125(c).</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Petition fee</E>. The fee set in § 41.20(a) must accompany any petition under this section except no fee is required for a petition under this section seeking supervisory review.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Effect on proceeding</E>. The filing of a petition does not stay the time for any other action in a Board proceeding.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Time for action.</E> (1) Except as otherwise provided in this part or as the Board may authorize in writing, a party may:<PRTPAGE P="375"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) File the petition within 14 days from the date of the action from which the party is requesting relief, and</P>
          <P>(ii) File any request for reconsideration of a petition decision within 14 days of the decision on petition or such other time as the Board may set.</P>
          <P>(2) A party may not file an opposition or a reply to a petition without Board authorization.</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 58260, Sept. 30, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.4</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Timeliness.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Extensions of time</E>. Extensions of time will be granted only on a showing of good cause except as otherwise provided by rule.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Late filings</E>. (1) A late filing that results in either an application becoming abandoned or a reexamination prosecution becoming terminated under § 1.550(d) or § 1.957(b) of this title or limited under § 1.957(c) of this title may be revived as set forth in § 1.137 of this title.</P>
          <P>(2) A late filing that does not result in either an application becoming abandoned or a reexamination prosecution becoming terminated under § 1.550(d) or § 1.957(b) of this title or limited under § 1.957(c) of this title will be excused upon a showing of excusable neglect or a Board determination that consideration on the merits would be in the interest of justice.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Scope</E>. This section governs all proceedings before the Board, but does not apply to filings related to Board proceedings before or after the Board has jurisdiction, such as:</P>
          <P>(1) Extensions during prosecution (see § 1.136 of this title),</P>
          <P>(2) Filing of a brief or request for oral hearing (see §§ 41.37, 41.41, 41.47, 41.67, 41.68, 41.71 and 41.73), or</P>
          <P>(3) Seeking judicial review (see §§ 1.301 to 1.304 of this title).</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, as amended at 72 FR 18907, Apr. 16, 2007]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.5</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Counsel.</SUBJECT>
          <P>While the Board has jurisdiction:</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Appearance pro hac vice</E>. The Board may authorize a person other than a registered practitioner to appear as counsel in a specific proceeding.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Disqualification</E>. (1) The Board may disqualify counsel in a specific proceeding after notice and an opportunity to be heard.</P>
          <P>(2) A decision to disqualify is not final for the purposes of judicial review until certified by the Chief Administrative Patent Judge.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Withdrawal</E>. Counsel may not withdraw from a proceeding before the Board unless the Board authorizes such withdrawal. See § 10.40 of this title regarding conditions for withdrawal.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Procedure</E>. The Board may institute a proceeding under this section on its own or a party in a contested case may request relief under this section.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Referral to the Director of Enrollment and Discipline</E>. Possible violations of the disciplinary rules in part 10 of this title may be referred to the Office of Enrollment and Discipline for investigation. See § 10.131 of this title.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.6</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Public availability of Board records.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Publication</E>—(1) <E T="03">Generally</E>. Any Board action is available for public inspection without a party's permission if rendered in a file open to the public pursuant to § 1.11 of this title or in an application that has been published in accordance with §§ 1.211 to 1.221 of this title. The Office may independently publish any Board action that is available for public inspection.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Determination of special circumstances</E>. Any Board action not publishable under paragraph (a)(1) of this section may be published or made available for public inspection if the Director believes that special circumstances warrant publication and a party does not, within two months after being notified of the intention to make the action public, object in writing on the ground that the action discloses the objecting party's trade secret or other confidential information and states with specificity that such information is not otherwise publicly available. If the action discloses such information, the party shall identify the deletions in the text of the action considered necessary to protect the information. If the affected party considers that the entire action must be withheld from the public to protect <PRTPAGE P="376"/>such information, the party must explain why. The party will be given time, not less than twenty days, to request reconsideration and seek court review before any contested portion of the action is made public over its objection.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Record of proceeding</E>. (1) The record of a Board proceeding is available to the public unless a patent application not otherwise available to the public is involved.</P>
          <P>(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this section, after a final Board action in or judgment in a Board proceeding, the record of the Board proceeding will be made available to the public if any involved file is or becomes open to the public under § 1.11 of this title or an involved application is or becomes published under §§ 1.211 to 1.221 of this title.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.7</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Management of the record.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The Board may expunge any paper directed to a Board proceeding, or filed while an application or patent is under the jurisdiction of the Board, that is not authorized under this part or in a Board order, or that is filed contrary to a Board order.</P>
          <P>(b) A party may not file a paper previously filed in the same Board proceeding, not even as an exhibit or appendix, without Board authorization or as required by rule.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.8</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Mandatory notices.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) In an appeal brief (§§ 41.37, 41.67, or 41.68) or at the initiation of a contested case (§ 41.101), and within 20 days of any change during the proceeding, a party must identify:</P>
          <P>(1) Its real party-in-interest, and</P>
          <P>(2) Each judicial or administrative proceeding that could affect, or be affected by, the Board proceeding.</P>
          <P>(b) For contested cases, a party seeking judicial review of a Board proceeding must file a notice with the Board of the judicial review within 20 days of the filing of the complaint or the notice of appeal. The notice to the Board must include a copy of the complaint or notice of appeal. See also §§ 1.301 to 1.304 of this title.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.9</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action by owner.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Entire interest</E>. An owner of the entire interest in an application or patent involved in a Board proceeding may act in the proceeding to the exclusion of the inventor (see § 3.73(b) of this title).</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Part interest</E>. An owner of a part interest in an application or patent involved in a Board proceeding may petition to act in the proceeding to the exclusion of an inventor or a co-owner. The petition must show the inability or refusal of an inventor or co-owner to prosecute the proceeding or other cause why it is in the interest of justice to permit the owner of a part interest to act in the proceeding. An order granting the petition may set conditions on the actions of the parties during the proceeding.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.10</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Correspondence addresses.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Except as the Board may otherwise direct,</P>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Appeals</E>. Correspondence in an application or a patent involved in an appeal (subparts B and C of this part) during the period beginning when an appeal docketing notice is issued and ending when a decision has been rendered by the Board, as well as any request for rehearing of a decision by the Board, shall be mailed to: Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, United States Patent and Trademark Office, PO Box 1450, Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450. Notices of appeal, appeal briefs, reply briefs, requests for oral hearing, as well as all other correspondence in an application or a patent involved in an appeal to the Board for which an address is not otherwise specified, should be addressed as set out in § 1.1(a)(1)(i) of this title.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Contested cases</E>. Mailed correspondence in contested cases (subpart D of this part) shall be sent to Mail Stop INTERFERENCE, Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, United States Patent and Trademark Office, PO Box 1450, Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.11</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>
            <E T="7462">Ex Parte</E> communications in <E T="7462">inter partes</E> proceedings.</SUBJECT>
          <P>An <E T="03">ex parte</E> communication about an <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination (subpart C of this part) or about a contested case <PRTPAGE P="377"/>(subparts D and E of this part) with a Board member, or with a Board employee assigned to the proceeding, is not permitted.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.12</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Citation of authority.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Citations to authority must include:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">For any United States Supreme Court decision</E>, a United States Reports citation.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">For any decision other than a United States Supreme Court decision</E>, parallel citation to both the West Reporter System and to the United States Patents Quarterly whenever the case is published in both. Other parallel citations are discouraged.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Pinpoint citations</E> whenever a specific holding or portion of an authority is invoked.</P>
          <P>(b) Non-binding authority should be used sparingly. If the authority is not an authority of the Office and is not reproduced in one of the reporters listed in paragraph (a) of this section, a copy of the authority should be filed with the first paper in which it is cited.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.20</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Fees.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Petition fee</E>. The fee for filing a petition under this part is $400.00.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Appeal fees.</E> (1) For filing a notice of appeal from the examiner to the Board:</P>
          <P>By a small entity (§ 1.27(a) of this title)—$250.00.</P>
          <P>By other than a small entity—$500.00.</P>
          <P>(2) In addition to the fee for filing a notice of appeal, for filing a brief in support of an appeal:</P>
          <P>By a small entity (§ 1.27(a) of this title)—$250.00.</P>
          <P>By other than a small entity—$500.00.</P>
          <P>(3) For filing a request for an oral hearing before the Board in an appeal under 35 U.S.C. 134:</P>
          <P>By a small entity (§ 1.27(a) of this title)—$500.00.</P>
          <P>By other than a small entity—$1,000.00.</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 52606, Aug. 27, 2004; 69 FR 55506, Sept. 15, 2004; 69 FR 56546, Sept. 21, 2004; 70 FR 3892, Jan. 27, 2005]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart B—<E T="0714">Ex Parte</E> Appeals</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.30</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In addition to the definitions in § 41.2, the following definitions apply to proceedings under this subpart unless otherwise clear from the context:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Applicant</E> means either the applicant in a national application for a patent or the applicant in an application for reissue of a patent.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Owner</E> means the owner of the patent undergoing <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination under § 1.510 of this title.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Proceeding</E> means either a national application for a patent, an application for reissue of a patent, or an <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceeding. Appeal to the Board in an <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination proceeding is controlled by subpart C of this part.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.31</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeal to Board.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Who may appeal and how to file an appeal</E>. (1) Every applicant, any of whose claims has been twice rejected, may appeal from the decision of the examiner to the Board by filing a notice of appeal accompanied by the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1) within the time period provided under § 1.134 of this title for reply.</P>
          <P>(2) Every owner of a patent under <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination filed under § 1.510 of this title before November 29, 1999, any of whose claims has been twice rejected, may appeal from the decision of the examiner to the Board by filing a notice of appeal accompanied by the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1) within the time period provided under § 1.134 of this title for reply.</P>
          <P>(3) Every owner of a patent under <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination filed under § 1.510 of this title on or after November 29, 1999, any of whose claims has been finally (§ 1.113 of this title) rejected, may appeal from the decision of the examiner to the Board by filing a notice of appeal accompanied by the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1) within the time period provided under § 1.134 of this title for reply.</P>
          <P>(b) The signature requirement of § 1.33 of this title does not apply to a notice of appeal filed under this section.</P>

          <P>(c) An appeal, when taken, must be taken from the rejection of all claims <PRTPAGE P="378"/>under rejection which the applicant or owner proposes to contest. Questions relating to matters not affecting the merits of the invention may be required to be settled before an appeal can be considered.</P>

          <P>(d) The time periods set forth in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(3) of this section are extendable under the provisions of § 1.136 of this title for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.33</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amendments and affidavits or other evidence after appeal.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Amendments filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.31(a)(1) through (a)(3) and prior to the date a brief is filed pursuant to § 41.37 may be admitted as provided in § 1.116 of this title.</P>
          <P>(b) Amendments filed on or after the date of filing a brief pursuant to § 41.37 may be admitted:</P>
          <P>(1) To cancel claims, where such cancellation does not affect the scope of any other pending claim in the proceeding, or</P>
          <P>(2) To rewrite dependent claims into independent form.</P>
          <P>(c) All other amendments filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.31(a)(1) through (a)(3) will not be admitted except as permitted by §§ 41.39(b)(1), 41.50(a)(2)(i), 41.50(b)(1) and 41.50(c).</P>
          <P>(d)(1) An affidavit or other evidence filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.31(a)(1) through (a)(3) and prior to the date of filing a brief pursuant to § 41.37 may be admitted if the examiner determines that the affidavit or other evidence overcomes all rejections under appeal and that a showing of good and sufficient reasons why the affidavit or other evidence is necessary and was not earlier presented has been made.</P>
          <P>(2) All other affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.31(a)(1) through (a)(3) will not be admitted except as permitted by §§ 41.39(b)(1), 41.50(a)(2)(i) and 41.50(b)(1).</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.35</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Jurisdiction over appeal.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Jurisdiction over the proceeding passes to the Board upon transmittal of the file, including all briefs and examiner's answers, to the Board.</P>
          <P>(b) If, after receipt and review of the proceeding, the Board determines that the file is not complete or is not in compliance with the requirements of this subpart, the Board may relinquish jurisdiction to the examiner or take other appropriate action to permit completion of the file.</P>
          <P>(c) Prior to the entry of a decision on the appeal by the Board, the Director may sua sponte order the proceeding remanded to the examiner.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.37</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appeal brief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) Appellant must file a brief under this section within two months from the date of filing the notice of appeal under § 41.31.</P>
          <P>(2) The brief must be accompanied by the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(2).</P>
          <P>(b) On failure to file the brief, accompanied by the requisite fee, within the period specified in paragraph (a) of this section, the appeal will stand dismissed.</P>
          <P>(c)(1) The brief shall contain the following items under appropriate headings and in the order indicated in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(x) of this section, except that a brief filed by an appellant who is not represented by a registered practitioner need only substantially comply with paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iv) and (c)(1)(vii) through (c)(1)(x) of this section:</P>
          <P>(i) <E T="03">Real party in interest</E>. A statement identifying by name the real party in interest.</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">Related appeals and interferences</E>. A statement identifying by application, patent, appeal or interference number all other prior and pending appeals, interferences or judicial proceedings known to appellant, the appellant's legal representative, or assignee which may be related to, directly affect or be directly affected by or have a bearing on the Board's decision in the pending appeal. Copies of any decisions rendered by a court or the Board in any proceeding identified under this paragraph must be included in an appendix as required by paragraph (c)(1)(x) of this section.<PRTPAGE P="379"/>
          </P>
          <P>(iii) <E T="03">Status of claims</E>. A statement of the status of all the claims in the proceeding (<E T="03">e.g.</E>, rejected, allowed or confirmed, withdrawn, objected to, canceled) and an identification of those claims that are being appealed.</P>
          <P>(iv) <E T="03">Status of amendments</E>. A statement of the status of any amendment filed subsequent to final rejection.</P>
          <P>(v) <E T="03">Summary of claimed subject matter</E>. A concise explanation of the subject matter defined in each of the independent claims involved in the appeal, which shall refer to the specification by page and line number, and to the drawing, if any, by reference characters. For each independent claim involved in the appeal and for each dependent claim argued separately under the provisions of paragraph (c)(1)(vii) of this section, every means plus function and step plus function as permitted by 35 U.S.C. 112, sixth paragraph, must be identified and the structure, material, or acts described in the specification as corresponding to each claimed function must be set forth with reference to the specification by page and line number, and to the drawing, if any, by reference characters.</P>
          <P>(vi) <E T="03">Grounds of rejection to be reviewed on appeal</E>. A concise statement of each ground of rejection presented for review.</P>
          <P>(vii) <E T="03">Argument</E>. The contentions of appellant with respect to each ground of rejection presented for review in paragraph (c)(1)(vi) of this section, and the basis therefor, with citations of the statutes, regulations, authorities, and parts of the record relied on. Any arguments or authorities not included in the brief or a reply brief filed pursuant to § 41.41 will be refused consideration by the Board, unless good cause is shown. Each ground of rejection must be treated under a separate heading. For each ground of rejection applying to two or more claims, the claims may be argued separately or as a group. When multiple claims subject to the same ground of rejection are argued as a group by appellant, the Board may select a single claim from the group of claims that are argued together to decide the appeal with respect to the group of claims as to the ground of rejection on the basis of the selected claim alone. Notwithstanding any other provision of this paragraph, the failure of appellant to separately argue claims which appellant has grouped together shall constitute a waiver of any argument that the Board must consider the patentability of any grouped claim separately. Any claim argued separately should be placed under a subheading identifying the claim by number. Claims argued as a group should be placed under a subheading identifying the claims by number. A statement which merely points out what a claim recites will not be considered an argument for separate patentability of the claim.</P>
          <P>(viii) <E T="03">Claims appendix</E>. An appendix containing a copy of the claims involved in the appeal.</P>
          <P>(ix) <E T="03">Evidence appendix</E>. An appendix containing copies of any evidence submitted pursuant to §§ 1.130, 1.131, or 1.132 of this title or of any other evidence entered by the examiner and relied upon by appellant in the appeal, along with a statement setting forth where in the record that evidence was entered in the record by the examiner. Reference to unentered evidence is not permitted in the brief. See § 41.33 for treatment of evidence submitted after appeal. This appendix may also include copies of the evidence relied upon by the examiner as to grounds of rejection to be reviewed on appeal.</P>
          <P>(x) <E T="03">Related proceedings appendix</E>. An appendix containing copies of decisions rendered by a court or the Board in any proceeding identified pursuant to paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section.</P>
          <P>(2) A brief shall not include any new or non-admitted amendment, or any new or non-admitted affidavit or other evidence. See § 1.116 of this title for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after final action but before or on the same date of filing an appeal and § 41.33 for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing the appeal.</P>

          <P>(d) If a brief is filed which does not comply with all the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section, appellant will be notified of the reasons for non-compliance and given a time period within which to file an amended brief. If appellant does not file an amended brief within the set time period, or files <PRTPAGE P="380"/>an amended brief which does not overcome all the reasons for non-compliance stated in the notification, the appeal will stand dismissed.</P>

          <P>(e) The time periods set forth in this section are extendable under the provisions of § 1.136 of this title for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.39</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Examiner's answer.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) The primary examiner may, within such time as may be directed by the Director, furnish a written answer to the appeal brief including such explanation of the invention claimed and of the references relied upon and grounds of rejection as may be necessary, supplying a copy to appellant. If the primary examiner determines that the appeal does not comply with the provisions of §§ 41.31 and 41.37 or does not relate to an appealable action, the primary examiner shall make such determination of record.</P>
          <P>(2) An examiner's answer may include a new ground of rejection.</P>
          <P>(b) If an examiner's answer contains a rejection designated as a new ground of rejection, appellant must within two months from the date of the examiner's answer exercise one of the following two options to avoid sua sponte dismissal of the appeal as to the claims subject to the new ground of rejection:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Reopen prosecution</E>. Request that prosecution be reopened before the primary examiner by filing a reply under § 1.111 of this title with or without amendment or submission of affidavits (§§ 1.130, 1.131 or 1.132 of this title) or other evidence. Any amendment or submission of affidavits or other evidence must be relevant to the new ground of rejection. A request that complies with this paragraph will be entered and the application or the patent under <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination will be reconsidered by the examiner under the provisions of § 1.112 of this title. Any request that prosecution be reopened under this paragraph will be treated as a request to withdraw the appeal.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Maintain appeal</E>. Request that the appeal be maintained by filing a reply brief as set forth in § 41.41. Such a reply brief must address each new ground of rejection as set forth in § 41.37(c)(1)(vii) and should follow the other requirements of a brief as set forth in § 41.37(c). A reply brief may not be accompanied by any amendment, affidavit (§§ 1.130, 1.131 or 1.132 of this title) or other evidence. If a reply brief filed pursuant to this section is accompanied by any amendment, affidavit or other evidence, it shall be treated as a request that prosecution be reopened before the primary examiner under paragraph (b)(1) of this section.</P>

          <P>(c) Extensions of time under § 1.136(a) of this title for patent applications are not applicable to the time period set forth in this section. See § 1.136(b) of this title for extensions of time to reply for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for extensions of time to reply for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.41</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Reply brief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) Appellant may file a reply brief to an examiner's answer within two months from the date of the examiner's answer.</P>
          <P>(2) A reply brief shall not include any new or non-admitted amendment, or any new or non-admitted affidavit or other evidence. See § 1.116 of this title for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after final action but before or on the same date of filing an appeal and § 41.33 for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing the appeal.</P>
          <P>(b) A reply brief that is not in compliance with paragraph (a) of this section will not be considered. Appellant will be notified if a reply brief is not in compliance with paragraph (a) of this section.</P>

          <P>(c) Extensions of time under § 1.136(a) of this title for patent applications are not applicable to the time period set forth in this section. See § 1.136(b) of this title for extensions of time to reply for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for extensions of time to reply for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.43</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Examiner's response to reply brief.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a)(1) After receipt of a reply brief in compliance with § 41.41, the primary examiner must acknowledge receipt and entry of the reply brief. In addition, <PRTPAGE P="381"/>the primary examiner may withdraw the final rejection and reopen prosecution or may furnish a supplemental examiner's answer responding to any new issue raised in the reply brief.</P>
          <P>(2) A supplemental examiner's answer responding to a reply brief may not include a new ground of rejection.</P>
          <P>(b) If a supplemental examiner's answer is furnished by the examiner, appellant may file another reply brief under § 41.41 to any supplemental examiner's answer within two months from the date of the supplemental examiner's answer.</P>

          <P>(c) Extensions of time under § 1.136(a) of this title for patent applications are not applicable to the time period set forth in this section. See § 1.136(b) of this title for extensions of time to reply for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for extensions of time to reply for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.47</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oral hearing.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) An oral hearing should be requested only in those circumstances in which appellant considers such a hearing necessary or desirable for a proper presentation of the appeal. An appeal decided on the briefs without an oral hearing will receive the same consideration by the Board as appeals decided after an oral hearing.</P>
          <P>(b) If appellant desires an oral hearing, appellant must file, as a separate paper captioned “REQUEST FOR ORAL HEARING,” a written request for such hearing accompanied by the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(3) within two months from the date of the examiner's answer or supplemental examiner's answer.</P>
          <P>(c) If no request and fee for oral hearing have been timely filed by appellant as required by paragraph (b) of this section, the appeal will be assigned for consideration and decision on the briefs without an oral hearing.</P>
          <P>(d) If appellant has complied with all the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section, a date for the oral hearing will be set, and due notice thereof given to appellant. If an oral hearing is held, an oral argument may be presented by, or on behalf of, the primary examiner if considered desirable by either the primary examiner or the Board. A hearing will be held as stated in the notice, and oral argument will ordinarily be limited to twenty minutes for appellant and fifteen minutes for the primary examiner unless otherwise ordered.</P>
          <P>(e)(1) Appellant will argue first and may reserve time for rebuttal. At the oral hearing, appellant may only rely on evidence that has been previously entered and considered by the primary examiner and present argument that has been relied upon in the brief or reply brief except as permitted by paragraph (e)(2) of this section. The primary examiner may only rely on argument and evidence relied upon in an answer or a supplemental answer except as permitted by paragraph (e)(2) of this section.</P>
          <P>(2) Upon a showing of good cause, appellant and/or the primary examiner may rely on a new argument based upon a recent relevant decision of either the Board or a Federal Court.</P>
          <P>(f) Notwithstanding the submission of a request for oral hearing complying with this rule, if the Board decides that a hearing is not necessary, the Board will so notify appellant.</P>

          <P>(g) Extensions of time under § 1.136(a) of this title for patent applications are not applicable to the time periods set forth in this section. See § 1.136(b) of this title for extensions of time to reply for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for extensions of time to reply for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.50</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decisions and other actions by the Board.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) The Board, in its decision, may affirm or reverse the decision of the examiner in whole or in part on the grounds and on the claims specified by the examiner. The affirmance of the rejection of a claim on any of the grounds specified constitutes a general affirmance of the decision of the examiner on that claim, except as to any ground specifically reversed. The Board may also remand an application to the examiner.</P>

          <P>(2) If a supplemental examiner's answer is written in response to a remand by the Board for further consideration of a rejection pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the appellant <PRTPAGE P="382"/>must within two months from the date of the supplemental examiner's answer exercise one of the following two options to avoid sua sponte dismissal of the appeal as to the claims subject to the rejection for which the Board has remanded the proceeding:</P>
          <P>(i) <E T="03">Reopen prosecution</E>. Request that prosecution be reopened before the examiner by filing a reply under § 1.111 of this title with or without amendment or submission of affidavits (§§ 1.130, 1.131 or 1.132 of this title) or other evidence. Any amendment or submission of affidavits or other evidence must be relevant to the issues set forth in the remand or raised in the supplemental examiner's answer. A request that complies with this paragraph will be entered and the application or the patent under <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination will be reconsidered by the examiner under the provisions of § 1.112 of this title. Any request that prosecution be reopened under this paragraph will be treated as a request to withdraw the appeal.</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">Maintain appeal</E>. Request that the appeal be maintained by filing a reply brief as provided in § 41.41. If such a reply brief is accompanied by any amendment, affidavit or other evidence, it shall be treated as a request that prosecution be reopened before the examiner under paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section.</P>
          <P>(b) Should the Board have knowledge of any grounds not involved in the appeal for rejecting any pending claim, it may include in its opinion a statement to that effect with its reasons for so holding, which statement constitutes a new ground of rejection of the claim. A new ground of rejection pursuant to this paragraph shall not be considered final for judicial review. When the Board makes a new ground of rejection, the appellant, within two months from the date of the decision, must exercise one of the following two options with respect to the new ground of rejection to avoid termination of the appeal as to the rejected claims:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Reopen prosecution</E>. Submit an appropriate amendment of the claims so rejected or new evidence relating to the claims so rejected, or both, and have the matter reconsidered by the examiner, in which event the proceeding will be remanded to the examiner. The new ground of rejection is binding upon the examiner unless an amendment or new evidence not previously of record is made which, in the opinion of the examiner, overcomes the new ground of rejection stated in the decision. Should the examiner reject the claims, appellant may again appeal to the Board pursuant to this subpart.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Request rehearing</E>. Request that the proceeding be reheard under § 41.52 by the Board upon the same record. The request for rehearing must address any new ground of rejection and state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked in entering the new ground of rejection and also state all other grounds upon which rehearing is sought.</P>
          <P>(c) The opinion of the Board may include an explicit statement of how a claim on appeal may be amended to overcome a specific rejection. When the opinion of the Board includes such a statement, appellant has the right to amend in conformity therewith. An amendment in conformity with such statement will overcome the specific rejection. An examiner may reject a claim so-amended, provided that the rejection constitutes a new ground of rejection.</P>
          <P>(d) The Board may order appellant to additionally brief any matter that the Board considers to be of assistance in reaching a reasoned decision on the pending appeal. Appellant will be given a non-extendable time period within which to respond to such an order. Failure to timely comply with the order may result in the sua sponte dismissal of the appeal.</P>
          <P>(e) Whenever a decision of the Board includes a remand, that decision shall not be considered final for judicial review. When appropriate, upon conclusion of proceedings on remand before the examiner, the Board may enter an order otherwise making its decision final for judicial review.</P>

          <P>(f) Extensions of time under § 1.136(a) of this title for patent applications are not applicable to the time periods set forth in this section. See § 1.136(b) of this title for extensions of time to reply for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for extensions of <PRTPAGE P="383"/>time to reply for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.52</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rehearing.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) Appellant may file a single request for rehearing within two months of the date of the original decision of the Board. No request for rehearing from a decision on rehearing will be permitted, unless the rehearing decision so modified the original decision as to become, in effect, a new decision, and the Board states that a second request for rehearing would be permitted. The request for rehearing must state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked by the Board. Arguments not raised in the briefs before the Board and evidence not previously relied upon in the brief and any reply brief(s) are not permitted in the request for rehearing except as permitted by paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this section. When a request for rehearing is made, the Board shall render a decision on the request for rehearing. The decision on the request for rehearing is deemed to incorporate the earlier opinion reflecting its decision for appeal, except for those portions specifically withdrawn on rehearing, and is final for the purpose of judicial review, except when noted otherwise in the decision on rehearing.</P>
          <P>(2) Upon a showing of good cause, appellant may present a new argument based upon a recent relevant decision of either the Board or a Federal Court.</P>
          <P>(3) New arguments responding to a new ground of rejection made pursuant to § 41.50(b) are permitted.</P>

          <P>(b) Extensions of time under § 1.136(a) of this title for patent applications are not applicable to the time period set forth in this section. See § 1.136(b) of this title for extensions of time to reply for patent applications and § 1.550(c) of this title for extensions of time to reply for <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceedings.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.54</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action following decision.</SUBJECT>
          <P>After decision by the Board, the proceeding will be returned to the examiner, subject to appellant's right of appeal or other review, for such further action by appellant or by the examiner, as the condition of the proceeding may require, to carry into effect the decision.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart C—<E T="0714">Inter Partes</E> Appeals</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.60</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In addition to the definitions in § 41.2, the following definitions apply to proceedings under this subpart unless otherwise clear from the context:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Appellant</E> means any party, whether the owner or a requester, filing a notice of appeal or cross appeal under § 41.61. If more than one party appeals or cross appeals, each appealing or cross appealing party is an appellant with respect to the claims to which his or her appeal or cross appeal is directed.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Filing</E> means filing with a certificate indicating service of the document under § 1.903 of this title.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Owner</E> means the owner of the patent undergoing <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination under § 1.915 of this title.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Proceeding</E> means an <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination proceeding. Appeal to the Board in an <E T="03">ex parte</E> reexamination proceeding is controlled by subpart B of this part. An <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination proceeding is not a contested case subject to subpart D.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Requester</E> means each party, other than the owner, who requested that the patent undergo <E T="03">inter partes</E> reexamination under § 1.915 of this title.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Respondent</E> means any requester responding under § 41.68 to the appellant's brief of the owner, or the owner responding under § 41.68 to the appellant's brief of any requester. No requester may be a respondent to the appellant brief of any other requester.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.61</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of appeal and cross appeal to Board.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) Upon the issuance of a Right of Appeal Notice under § 1.953 of this title, the owner may appeal to the Board with respect to the final rejection of any claim of the patent by filing a notice of appeal within the time provided in the Right of Appeal Notice and paying the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1).</P>

          <P>(2) Upon the issuance of a Right of Appeal Notice under § 1.953 of this title, the requester may appeal to the Board with respect to any final decision favorable to the patentability, including <PRTPAGE P="384"/>any final determination not to make a proposed rejection, of any original, proposed amended, or new claim of the patent by filing a notice of appeal within the time provided in the Right of Appeal Notice and paying the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1).</P>
          <P>(b)(1) Within fourteen days of service of a requester's notice of appeal under paragraph (a)(2) of this section and upon payment of the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1), an owner who has not filed a notice of appeal may file a notice of cross appeal with respect to the final rejection of any claim of the patent.</P>
          <P>(2) Within fourteen days of service of an owner's notice of appeal under paragraph (a)(1) of this section and upon payment of the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(1), a requester who has not filed a notice of appeal may file a notice of cross appeal with respect to any final decision favorable to the patentability, including any final determination not to make a proposed rejection, of any original, proposed amended, or new claim of the patent.</P>
          <P>(c) The notice of appeal or cross appeal in the proceeding must identify the appealed claim(s) and must be signed by the owner, the requester, or a duly authorized attorney or agent.</P>
          <P>(d) An appeal or cross appeal, when taken, must be taken from all the rejections of the claims in a Right of Appeal Notice which the patent owner proposes to contest or from all the determinations favorable to patentability, including any final determination not to make a proposed rejection, in a Right of Appeal Notice which a requester proposes to contest. Questions relating to matters not affecting the merits of the invention may be required to be settled before an appeal is decided.</P>
          <P>(e) The time periods for filing a notice of appeal or cross appeal may not be extended.</P>
          <P>(f) If a notice of appeal or cross appeal is timely filed but does not comply with any requirement of this section, appellant will be notified of the reasons for non-compliance and given a non-extendable time period within which to file an amended notice of appeal or cross appeal. If the appellant does not then file an amended notice of appeal or cross appeal within the set time period, or files a notice which does not overcome all the reasons for non-compliance stated in the notification of the reasons for non-compliance, that appellant's appeal or cross appeal will stand dismissed.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.63</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Amendments and affidavits or other evidence after appeal.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Amendments filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.61 canceling claims may be admitted where such cancellation does not affect the scope of any other pending claim in the proceeding.</P>
          <P>(b) All other amendments filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.61 will not be admitted except as permitted by § 41.77(b)(1).</P>
          <P>(c) Affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.61 will not be admitted except as permitted by reopening prosecution under § 41.77(b)(1).</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.64</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Jurisdiction over appeal in <E T="7462">inter partes</E> reexamination.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Jurisdiction over the proceeding passes to the Board upon transmittal of the file, including all briefs and examiner's answers, to the Board.</P>
          <P>(b) If, after receipt and review of the proceeding, the Board determines that the file is not complete or is not in compliance with the requirements of this subpart, the Board may relinquish jurisdiction to the examiner or take other appropriate action to permit completion of the file.</P>
          <P>(c) Prior to the entry of a decision on the appeal by the Board, the Director may sua sponte order the proceeding remanded to the examiner.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.66</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Time for filing briefs.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) An appellant's brief must be filed no later than two months from the latest filing date of the last-filed notice of appeal or cross appeal or, if any party to the proceeding is entitled to file an appeal or cross appeal but fails to timely do so, no later than two months from the expiration of the time for filing (by the last party entitled to do so) such notice of appeal or cross appeal. The time for filing an appellant's brief or an amended appellant's brief may not be extended.<PRTPAGE P="385"/>
          </P>
          <P>(b) Once an appellant's brief has been properly filed, any brief must be filed by respondent within one month from the date of service of the appellant's brief. The time for filing a respondent's brief or an amended respondent's brief may not be extended.</P>
          <P>(c) The examiner will consider both the appellant's and respondent's briefs and may prepare an examiner's answer under § 41.69.</P>
          <P>(d) Any appellant may file a rebuttal brief under § 41.71 within one month of the date of the examiner's answer. The time for filing a rebuttal brief or an amended rebuttal brief may not be extended.</P>
          <P>(e) No further submission will be considered and any such submission will be treated in accordance with § 1.939 of this title.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.67</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Appellant's brief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) Appellant(s) may once, within time limits for filing set forth in § 41.66, file a brief and serve the brief on all other parties to the proceeding in accordance with § 1.903 of this title.</P>
          <P>(2) The brief must be signed by the appellant, or the appellant's duly authorized attorney or agent and must be accompanied by the requisite fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(2).</P>
          <P>(b) An appellant's appeal shall stand dismissed upon failure of that appellant to file an appellant's brief, accompanied by the requisite fee, within the time allowed under § 41.66(a).</P>
          <P>(c)(1) The appellant's brief shall contain the following items under appropriate headings and in the order indicated in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(xi) of this section.</P>
          <P>(i) <E T="03">Real party in interest</E>. A statement identifying by name the real party in interest.</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">Related appeals and interferences</E>. A statement identifying by application, patent, appeal or interference number all other prior and pending appeals, interferences or judicial proceedings known to appellant, the appellant's legal representative, or assignee which may be related to, directly affect or be directly affected by or have a bearing on the Board's decision in the pending appeal. Copies of any decisions rendered by a court or the Board in any proceeding identified under this paragraph must be included in an appendix as required by paragraph (c)(1)(xi) of this section.</P>
          <P>(iii) <E T="03">Status of claims</E>. A statement of the status of all the claims in the proceeding (<E T="03">e.g.</E>, rejected, allowed or confirmed, withdrawn, objected to, canceled). If the appellant is the owner, the appellant must also identify the rejected claims whose rejection is being appealed. If the appellant is a requester, the appellant must identify the claims that the examiner has made a determination favorable to patentability, which determination is being appealed.</P>
          <P>(iv) <E T="03">Status of amendments</E>. A statement of the status of any amendment filed subsequent to the close of prosecution.</P>
          <P>(v) <E T="03">Summary of claimed subject matter</E>. A concise explanation of the subject matter defined in each of the independent claims involved in the appeal, which shall refer to the specification by column and line number, and to the drawing(s), if any, by reference characters. For each independent claim involved in the appeal and for each dependent claim argued separately under the provisions of paragraph (c)(1)(vii) of this section, every means plus function and step plus function as permitted by 35 U.S.C. 112, sixth paragraph, must be identified and the structure, material, or acts described in the specification as corresponding to each claimed function must be set forth with reference to the specification by page and line number, and to the drawing, if any, by reference characters.</P>
          <P>(vi) <E T="03">Issues to be reviewed on appeal</E>. A concise statement of each issue presented for review. No new ground of rejection can be proposed by a third party requester appellant, unless such ground was withdrawn by the examiner during the prosecution of the proceeding, and the third party requester has not yet had an opportunity to propose it as a third party requester proposed ground of rejection.</P>
          <P>(vii) <E T="03">Argument</E>. The contentions of appellant with respect to each issue presented for review in paragraph (c)(1)(vi) of this section, and the basis therefor, with citations of the statutes, regulations, authorities, and parts of the <PRTPAGE P="386"/>record relied on. Any arguments or authorities not included in the brief permitted under this section or §§ 41.68 and 41.71 will be refused consideration by the Board, unless good cause is shown. Each issue must be treated under a separate heading. If the appellant is the patent owner, for each ground of rejection in the Right of Appeal Notice which appellant contests and which applies to two or more claims, the claims may be argued separately or as a group. When multiple claims subject to the same ground of rejection are argued as a group by appellant, the Board may select a single claim from the group of claims that are argued together to decide the appeal with respect to the group of claims as to the ground of rejection on the basis of the selected claim alone. Notwithstanding any other provision of this paragraph, the failure of appellant to separately argue claims which appellant has grouped together shall constitute a waiver of any argument that the Board must consider the patentability of any grouped claim separately. Any claim argued separately should be placed under a subheading identifying the claim by number. Claims argued as a group should be placed under a subheading identifying the claims by number. A statement which merely points out what a claim recites will not be considered an argument for separate patentability of the claim.</P>
          <P>(viii) <E T="03">Claims appendix</E>. An appendix containing a copy of the claims to be reviewed on appeal.</P>
          <P>(ix) <E T="03">Evidence appendix</E>. An appendix containing copies of any evidence submitted pursuant to §§ 1.130, 1.131, or 1.132 of this title or of any other evidence entered by the examiner and relied upon by appellant in the appeal, along with a statement setting forth where in the record that evidence was entered in the record by the examiner. Reference to unentered evidence is not permitted in the brief. See § 41.63 for treatment of evidence submitted after appeal. This appendix may also include copies of the evidence relied upon by the examiner in any ground of rejection to be reviewed on appeal.</P>
          <P>(x) <E T="03">Related proceedings appendix</E>. An appendix containing copies of decisions rendered by a court or the Board in any proceeding identified pursuant to paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section.</P>
          <P>(xi) <E T="03">Certificate of service</E>. A certification that a copy of the brief has been served in its entirety on all other parties to the reexamination proceeding. The names and addresses of the parties served must be indicated.</P>
          <P>(2) A brief shall not include any new or non-admitted amendment, or any new or non-admitted affidavit or other evidence. See § 1.116 of this title for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after final action but before or on the same date of filing an appeal and § 41.63 for amendments, affidavits or other evidence after the date of filing the appeal.</P>
          <P>(d) If a brief is filed which does not comply with all the requirements of paragraph (a) and paragraph (c) of this section, appellant will be notified of the reasons for non-compliance and given a non-extendable time period within which to file an amended brief. If appellant does not file an amended brief within the set time period, or files an amended brief which does not overcome all the reasons for non-compliance stated in the notification, that appellant's appeal will stand dismissed.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.68</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Respondent's brief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a)(1) Respondent(s) in an appeal may once, within the time limit for filing set forth in § 41.66, file a respondent brief and serve the brief on all parties in accordance with § 1.903 of this title.</P>
          <P>(2) The brief must be signed by the party, or the party's duly authorized attorney or agent, and must be accompanied by the requisite fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(2).</P>
          <P>(3) The respondent brief shall be limited to issues raised in the appellant brief to which the respondent brief is directed.</P>
          <P>(4) A requester's respondent brief may not address any brief of any other requester.</P>

          <P>(b)(1) The respondent brief shall contain the following items under appropriate headings and in the order here indicated, and may include an appendix containing only those portions of the record on which reliance has been made.<PRTPAGE P="387"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) <E T="03">Real Party in Interest</E>. A statement identifying by name the real party in interest.</P>
          <P>(ii) <E T="03">Related Appeals and Interferences</E>. A statement identifying by application, patent, appeal or interference number all other prior and pending appeals, interferences or judicial proceedings known to respondent, the respondent's legal representative, or assignee which may be related to, directly affect or be directly affected by or have a bearing on the Board's decision in the pending appeal. Copies of any decisions rendered by a court or the Board in any proceeding identified under this paragraph must be included in an appendix as required by paragraph (b)(1)(ix) of this section.</P>
          <P>(iii) <E T="03">Status of claims</E>. A statement accepting or disputing appellant's statement of the status of claims. If appellant's statement of the status of claims is disputed, the errors in appellant's statement must be specified with particularity.</P>
          <P>(iv) <E T="03">Status of amendments</E>. A statement accepting or disputing appellant's statement of the status of amendments. If appellant's statement of the status of amendments is disputed, the errors in appellant's statement must be specified with particularity.</P>
          <P>(v) <E T="03">Summary of claimed subject matter</E>. A statement accepting or disputing appellant's summary of the subject matter defined in each of the independent claims involved in the appeal. If appellant's summary of the subject matter is disputed, the errors in appellant's summary must be specified.</P>
          <P>(vi) <E T="03">Issues to be reviewed on appeal</E>. A statement accepting or disputing appellant's statement of the issues presented for review. If appellant's statement of the issues presented for review is disputed, the errors in appellant's statement must be specified. A counter statement of the issues for review may be made. No new ground of rejection can be proposed by a requester respondent.</P>
          <P>(vii) <E T="03">Argument</E>. A statement accepting or disputing the contentions of appellant with each of the issues presented by the appellant for review. If a contention of the appellant is disputed, the errors in appellant's argument must be specified, stating the basis therefor, with citations of the statutes, regulations, authorities, and parts of the record relied on. Each issue must be treated under a separate heading. An argument may be made with each of the issues stated in the counter statement of the issues, with each counter-stated issue being treated under a separate heading.</P>
          <P>(viii) <E T="03">Evidence appendix</E>. An appendix containing copies of any evidence submitted pursuant to §§ 1.130, 1.131, or 1.132 of this title or of any other evidence entered by the examiner and relied upon by respondent in the appeal, along with a statement setting forth where in the record that evidence was entered in the record by the examiner. Reference to unentered evidence is not permitted in the respondent's brief. See § 41.63 for treatment of evidence submitted after appeal.</P>
          <P>(ix) <E T="03">Related proceedings appendix</E>. An appendix containing copies of decisions rendered by a court or the Board in any proceeding identified pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section.</P>
          <P>(x) <E T="03">Certificate of service</E>. A certification that a copy of the respondent brief has been served in its entirety on all other parties to the reexamination proceeding. The names and addresses of the parties served must be indicated.</P>
          <P>(2) A respondent brief shall not include any new or non-admitted amendment, or any new or non-admitted affidavit or other evidence. See § 1.116 of this title for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after final action but before or on the same date of filing an appeal and § 41.63 for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing the appeal.</P>

          <P>(c) If a respondent brief is filed which does not comply with all the requirements of paragraph (a) and paragraph (b) of this section, respondent will be notified of the reasons for non-compliance and given a non-extendable time period within which to file an amended brief. If respondent does not file an amended respondent brief within the <PRTPAGE P="388"/>set time period, or files an amended respondent brief which does not overcome all the reasons for non-compliance stated in the notification, the respondent brief and any amended respondent brief by that respondent will not be considered.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.69</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Examiner's answer.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The primary examiner may, within such time as directed by the Director, furnish a written answer to the owner's and/or requester's appellant brief or respondent brief including, as may be necessary, such explanation of the invention claimed and of the references relied upon, the grounds of rejection, and the reasons for patentability, including grounds for not adopting any proposed rejection. A copy of the answer shall be supplied to the owner and all requesters. If the primary examiner determines that the appeal does not comply with the provisions of §§ 41.61, 41.66, 41.67 and 41.68 or does not relate to an appealable action, the primary examiner shall make such determination of record.</P>
          <P>(b) An examiner's answer may not include a new ground of rejection.</P>
          <P>(c) An examiner's answer may not include a new determination not to make a proposed rejection of a claim.</P>
          <P>(d) Any new ground of rejection, or any new determination not to make a proposed rejection, must be made in an Office action reopening prosecution.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.71</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rebuttal brief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Within one month of the examiner's answer, any appellant may once file a rebuttal brief.</P>
          <P>(b)(1) The rebuttal brief of the owner may be directed to the examiner's answer and/or any respondent brief.</P>
          <P>(2) The rebuttal brief of the owner shall not include any new or non-admitted amendment, or an affidavit or other evidence. See § 1.116 of this title for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after final action but before or on the same date of filing an appeal and § 41.63 for amendments, affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing the appeal.</P>
          <P>(c)(1) The rebuttal brief of any requester may be directed to the examiner's answer and/or the respondent brief of the owner.</P>
          <P>(2) The rebuttal brief of a requester may not be directed to the respondent brief of any other requester.</P>
          <P>(3) No new ground of rejection can be proposed by a requester.</P>
          <P>(4) The rebuttal brief of a requester shall not include any new or non-admitted affidavit or other evidence. See § 1.116(d) of this title for affidavits or other evidence filed after final action but before or on the same date of filing an appeal and § 41.63(c) for affidavits or other evidence filed after the date of filing the appeal.</P>
          <P>(d) The rebuttal brief must include a certification that a copy of the rebuttal brief has been served in its entirety on all other parties to the proceeding. The names and addresses of the parties served must be indicated.</P>
          <P>(e) If a rebuttal brief is timely filed under paragraph (a) of this section but does not comply with all the requirements of paragraphs (a) through (d) of this section, appellant will be notified of the reasons for non-compliance and provided with a non-extendable period of one month within which to file an amended rebuttal brief. If the appellant does not file an amended rebuttal brief during the one-month period, or files an amended rebuttal brief which does not overcome all the reasons for non-compliance stated in the notification, that appellant's rebuttal brief and any amended rebuttal brief by that appellant will not be considered.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.73</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oral hearing.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) An oral hearing should be requested only in those circumstances in which an appellant or a respondent considers such a hearing necessary or desirable for a proper presentation of the appeal. An appeal decided on the briefs without an oral hearing will receive the same consideration by the Board as an appeal decided after an oral hearing.</P>

          <P>(b) If an appellant or a respondent desires an oral hearing, he or she must file, as a separate paper captioned “REQUEST FOR ORAL HEARING,” a written request for such hearing accompanied by the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(3) within two months after the date of the examiner's answer. The time for requesting an oral hearing may not be extended. The request must <PRTPAGE P="389"/>include a certification that a copy of the request has been served in its entirety on all other parties to the proceeding. The names and addresses of the parties served must be indicated.</P>
          <P>(c) If no request and fee for oral hearing have been timely filed by appellant or respondent as required by paragraph (b) of this section, the appeal will be assigned for consideration and decision on the briefs without an oral hearing.</P>
          <P>(d) If appellant or respondent has complied with all the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section, a hearing date will be set, and notice given to the owner and all requesters. If an oral hearing is held, an oral argument may be presented by, or on behalf of, the primary examiner if considered desirable by either the primary examiner or the Board. The notice shall set a non-extendable period within which all requests for oral hearing shall be submitted by any other party to the appeal desiring to participate in the oral hearing. A hearing will be held as stated in the notice, and oral argument will be limited to thirty minutes for each appellant or respondent who has requested an oral hearing, and twenty minutes for the primary examiner unless otherwise ordered. No appellant or respondent will be permitted to participate in an oral hearing unless he or she has requested an oral hearing and submitted the fee set forth in § 41.20(b)(3).</P>
          <P>(e)(1) At the oral hearing, each appellant and respondent may only rely on evidence that has been previously entered and considered by the primary examiner and present argument that has been relied upon in the briefs except as permitted by paragraph (e)(2) of this section. The primary examiner may only rely on argument and evidence relied upon in an answer except as permitted by paragraph (e)(2) of this section. The Board will determine the order of the arguments presented at the oral hearing.</P>
          <P>(2) Upon a showing of good cause, appellant, respondent and/or the primary examiner may rely on a new argument based upon a recent relevant decision of either the Board or a Federal Court.</P>
          <P>(f) Notwithstanding the submission of a request for oral hearing complying with this rule, if the Board decides that a hearing is not necessary, the Board will so notify the owner and all requesters.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.77</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decisions and other actions by the Board.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences, in its decision, may affirm or reverse each decision of the examiner on all issues raised on each appealed claim, or remand the reexamination proceeding to the examiner for further consideration. The reversal of the examiner's determination not to make a rejection proposed by the third party requester constitutes a decision adverse to the patentability of the claims which are subject to that proposed rejection which will be set forth in the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences as a new ground of rejection under paragraph (b) of this section. The affirmance of the rejection of a claim on any of the grounds specified constitutes a general affirmance of the decision of the examiner on that claim, except as to any ground specifically reversed.</P>
          <P>(b) Should the Board reverse the examiner's determination not to make a rejection proposed by a requester, the Board shall set forth in the opinion in support of its decision a new ground of rejection; or should the Board have knowledge of any grounds not raised in the appeal for rejecting any pending claim, it may include in its opinion a statement to that effect with its reasons for so holding, which statement shall constitute a new ground of rejection of the claim. Any decision which includes a new ground of rejection pursuant to this paragraph shall not be considered final for judicial review. When the Board makes a new ground of rejection, the owner, within one month from the date of the decision, must exercise one of the following two options with respect to the new ground of rejection to avoid termination of the appeal proceeding as to the rejected claim:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Reopen prosecution.</E> The owner may file a response requesting reopening of prosecution before the examiner. Such a response must be either an amendment of the claims so rejected or new evidence relating to the claims so rejected, or both.<PRTPAGE P="390"/>
          </P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Request rehearing.</E> The owner may request that the proceeding be reheard under § 41.79 by the Board upon the same record. The request for rehearing must address any new ground of rejection and state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked in entering the new ground of rejection and also state all other grounds upon which rehearing is sought.</P>
          <P>(c) Where the owner has filed a response requesting reopening of prosecution under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, any requester, within one month of the date of service of the owner's response, may once file comments on the response. Such written comments must be limited to the issues raised by the Board's opinion reflecting its decision and the owner's response. Any requester that had not previously filed an appeal or cross appeal and is seeking under this subsection to file comments or a reply to the comments is subject to the appeal and brief fees under § 41.20(b)(1) and (2), respectively, which must accompany the comments or reply.</P>
          <P>(d) Following any response by the owner under paragraph (b)(1) of this section and any written comments from a requester under paragraph (c) of this section, the proceeding will be remanded to the examiner. The statement of the Board shall be binding upon the examiner unless an amendment or new evidence not previously of record is made which, in the opinion of the examiner, overcomes the new ground of rejection stated in the decision. The examiner will consider any owner response under paragraph (b)(1) of this section and any written comments by a requester under paragraph (c) of this section and issue a determination that the rejection is maintained or has been overcome.</P>
          <P>(e) Within one month of the examiner's determination pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section, the owner or any requester may once submit comments in response to the examiner's determination. Within one month of the date of service of comments in response to the examiner's determination, the owner and any requesters may file a reply to the comments. No requester reply may address the comments of any other requester reply. Any requester that had not previously filed an appeal or cross appeal and is seeking under this subsection to file comments or a reply to the comments is subject to the appeal and brief fees under § 41.20(b)(1) and (2), respectively, which must accompany the comments or reply.</P>
          <P>(f) After submission of any comments and any reply pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section, or after time has expired, the proceeding will be returned to the Board which shall reconsider the matter and issue a new decision. The new decision is deemed to incorporate the earlier decision, except for those portions specifically withdrawn.</P>
          <P>(g) The time period set forth in paragraph (b) of this section is subject to the extension of time provisions of § 1.956 of this title when the owner is responding under paragraph (b)(1) of this section. The time period set forth in paragraph (b) of this section may not be extended when the owner is responding under paragraph (b)(2) of this section. The time periods set forth in paragraphs (c) and (e) of this section may not be extended.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.79</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Rehearing.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Parties to the appeal may file a request for rehearing of the decision within one month of the date of:</P>
          <P>(1) The original decision of the Board under § 41.77(a),</P>
          <P>(2) The original § 41.77(b) decision under the provisions of § 41.77(b)(2),</P>
          <P>(3) The expiration of the time for the owner to take action under § 41.77(b)(2), or</P>
          <P>(4) The new decision of the Board under § 41.77(f).</P>
          <P>(b)(1) The request for rehearing must state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked in rendering the Board's opinion reflecting its decision. Arguments not raised in the briefs before the Board and evidence not previously relied upon in the briefs are not permitted in the request for rehearing except as permitted by paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) of this section.</P>

          <P>(2) Upon a showing of good cause, appellant and/or respondent may present a new argument based upon a recent <PRTPAGE P="391"/>relevant decision of either the Board or a Federal Court.</P>
          <P>(3) New arguments responding to a new ground of rejection made pursuant to § 41.77(b) are permitted.</P>
          <P>(c) Within one month of the date of service of any request for rehearing under paragraph (a) of this section, or any further request for rehearing under paragraph (d) of this section, the owner and all requesters may once file comments in opposition to the request for rehearing or the further request for rehearing. The comments in opposition must be limited to the issues raised in the request for rehearing or the further request for rehearing.</P>
          <P>(d) If a party to an appeal files a request for rehearing under paragraph (a) of this section, or a further request for rehearing under this section, the Board shall render a decision on the request for rehearing. The decision on the request for rehearing is deemed to incorporate the earlier opinion reflecting its decision for appeal, except for those portions specifically withdrawn on rehearing and is final for the purpose of judicial review, except when noted otherwise in the decision on rehearing. If the Board opinion reflecting its decision on rehearing becomes, in effect, a new decision, and the Board so indicates, then any party to the appeal may, within one month of the new decision, file a further request for rehearing of the new decision under this subsection. Such further request for rehearing must comply with paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(e) The times for requesting rehearing under paragraph (a) of this section, for requesting further rehearing under paragraph (c) of this section, and for submitting comments under paragraph (b) of this section may not be extended.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.81</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Action following decision.</SUBJECT>
          <P>The parties to an appeal to the Board may not appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit under § 1.983 of this title until all parties' rights to request rehearing have been exhausted, at which time the decision of the Board is final and appealable by any party to the appeal to the Board.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart D—Contested Cases</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.100</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In addition to the definitions in § 41.2, the following definitions apply to proceedings under this subpart:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Business day</E> means a day other than a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday within the District of Columbia.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Involved</E> means the Board has declared the patent application, patent, or claim so described to be a subject of the contested case.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.101</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of proceeding.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Notice of a contested case will be sent to every party to the proceeding. The entry of the notice initiates the proceeding.</P>
          <P>(b) When the Board is unable to provide actual notice of a contested case on a party through the correspondence address of record for the party, the Board may authorize other modes of notice, including:</P>
          <P>(1) Sending notice to another address associated with the party, or</P>
          <P>(2) Publishing the notice in the <E T="03">Official Gazette of the United States Patent and Trademark Office.</E>
          </P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.102</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Completion of examination.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Before a contested case is initiated, except as the Board may otherwise authorize, for each involved application and patent:</P>
          <P>(a) Examination or reexamination must be completed, and</P>
          <P>(b) There must be at least one claim that:</P>
          <P>(1) Is patentable but for a judgment in the contested case, and</P>
          <P>(2) Would be involved in the contested case.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.103</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Jurisdiction over involved files.</SUBJECT>
          <P>The Board acquires jurisdiction over any involved file when the Board initiates a contested case. Other proceedings for the involved file within the Office are suspended except as the Board may order.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.104</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Conduct of contested case.</SUBJECT>

          <P>(a) The Board may determine a proper course of conduct in a proceeding for any situation not specifically covered <PRTPAGE P="392"/>by this part and may enter non-final orders to administer the proceeding.</P>
          <P>(b) An administrative patent judge may waive or suspend in a proceeding the application of any rule in this subpart, subject to such conditions as the administrative patent judge may impose.</P>
          <P>(c) Times set in this subpart are defaults. In the event of a conflict between a time set by rule and a time set by order, the time set by order is controlling. Action due on a day other than a business day may be completed on the next business day unless the Board expressly states otherwise.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.106</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing and service.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">General format requirements.</E> (1) The paper used for filings must be durable and white. A party must choose to file on either A4-sized paper or 8<FR>1/2</FR> inch × 11 inch paper except in the case of exhibits that require a larger size in order to preserve details of the original. A party may not switch between paper sizes in a single proceeding. Only one side of the paper may be used.</P>
          <P>(2) In papers, including affidavits, created for the proceeding:</P>
          <P>(i) Markings must be in black ink or must otherwise provide an equivalently permanent, dark, high-contrast image on the paper. The quality of printing must be equivalent to the quality produced by a laser printer. Either a proportional or monospaced font may be used, but the proportional font must be 12-point or larger and a monospaced font must not contain more than 4 characters per centimeter (10 characters per inch). Case names must be underlined or italicized.</P>
          <P>(ii) Double spacing must be used except in headings, tables of contents, tables of authorities, indices, signature blocks, and certificates of service. Block quotations may be single-spaced and must be indented. Margins must be at least 2.5 centimeters (1 inch) on all sides.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Papers other than exhibits</E>—(1) <E T="03">Cover sheet.</E> (i) The cover sheet must include the caption the Board specifies for the proceeding, a header indicating the party and contact information for the party, and a title indicating the sequence and subject of the paper. For example, “JONES MOTION 2, For benefit of an earlier application”.</P>
          <P>(ii) If the Board specifies a color other than white for the cover sheet, the cover sheet must be that color.</P>
          <P>(2) Papers must have two 0.5 cm (<FR>1/4</FR> inch) holes with centers 1 cm (<FR>1/2</FR> inch) from the top of the page and 7 cm (2 <FR>3/4</FR> inch) apart, centered horizontally on the page.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Incorporation by reference; combined papers.</E> Arguments must not be incorporated by reference from one paper into another paper. Combined motions, oppositions, replies, or other combined papers are not permitted.</P>
          <P>(4) <E T="03">Exhibits.</E> Additional requirements for exhibits appear in § 41.154(c).</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Working copy.</E> Every paper filed must be accompanied by a working copy marked “APJ Copy”.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Specific filing forms</E>—(1) <E T="03">Filing by mail.</E> A paper filed using the EXPRESS MAIL <E T="51">®</E> service of the United States Postal Service will be deemed to be filed as of “date-in” on the EXPRESS MAIL <E T="51">®</E> mailing label; otherwise, mail will be deemed to be filed as of the stamped date of receipt at the Board.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Other modes of filing.</E> The Board may authorize other modes of filing, including electronic filing and hand filing, and may set conditions for the use of such other modes.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Service.</E> (1) Papers filed with the Board, if not previously served, must be served simultaneously on every opposing party except as the Board expressly directs.</P>
          <P>(2) If a party is represented by counsel, service must be on counsel.</P>
          <P>(3) Service must be by EXPRESS MAIL <E T="51">®</E> or by means at least as fast and reliable as EXPRESS MAIL <E T="51">®</E>. Electronic service is not permitted without Board authorization.</P>
          <P>(4) The date of service does not count in computing the time for responding.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Certificate of service.</E> (1) Papers other than exhibits must include a certificate of service as a separate page at the end of each paper that must be served on an opposing party.</P>
          <P>(2) Exhibits must be accompanied by a certificate of service, but a single certificate may accompany any group of exhibits submitted together.</P>
          <P>(3) A certificate of service must state:<PRTPAGE P="393"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) The date and manner of service,</P>
          <P>(ii) The name and address of every person served, and</P>
          <P>(iii) For exhibits filed as a group, the name and number of each exhibit served.</P>
          <P>(4) A certificate made by a person other than a registered patent practitioner must be in the form of an affidavit.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.108</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Lead counsel.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A party may be represented by counsel. The Board may require a party to appoint a lead counsel. If counsel is not of record in a party's involved application or patent, then a power of attorney for that counsel for the party's involved application or patent must be filed with the notice required in paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(b) Within 14 days of the initiation of each contested case, each party must file a separate notice identifying its counsel, if any, and providing contact information for each counsel identified or, if the party has no counsel, then for the party. Contact information must, at a minimum, include:</P>
          <P>(1) A mailing address;</P>
          <P>(2) An address for courier delivery when the mailing address is not available for such delivery (for example, when the mailing address is a Post Office box);</P>
          <P>(3) A telephone number;</P>
          <P>(4) A facsimile number; and</P>
          <P>(5) An electronic mail address.</P>
          <P>(c) A party must promptly notify the Board of any change in the contact information required in paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.109</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Access to and copies of Office records.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Request for access or copies.</E> Any request from a party for access to or copies of Office records directly related to a contested case must be filed with the Board. The request must precisely identify the records and in the case of copies include the appropriate fee set under § 1.19(b) of this title.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Authorization of access and copies.</E> Access and copies will ordinarily only be authorized for the following records:</P>
          <P>(1) The application file for an involved patent;</P>
          <P>(2) An involved application; and</P>
          <P>(3) An application for which a party has been accorded benefit under subpart E of this part.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Missing or incomplete copies.</E> If a party does not receive a complete copy of a record within 21 days of the authorization, the party must promptly notify the Board.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.110</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Filing claim information.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Clean copy of claims.</E> Within 14 days of the initiation of the proceeding, each party must file a clean copy of its involved claims and, if a biotechnology material sequence is a limitation, a clean copy of the sequence.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Annotated copy of claims.</E> Within 28 days of the initiation of the proceeding, each party must:</P>
          <P>(1) For each involved claim having a limitation that is illustrated in a drawing or biotechnology material sequence, file an annotated copy of the claim indicating in bold face between braces ({}) where each limitation is shown in the drawing or sequence.</P>
          <P>(2) For each involved claim that contains a means-plus-function or step-plus-function limitation in the form permitted under 35 U.S.C. 112(6), file an annotated copy of the claim indicating in bold face between braces ({}) the specific portions of the specification that describe the structure, material, or acts corresponding to each claimed function.</P>
          <P>(c) Any motion to add or amend a claim must include:</P>
          <P>(1) A clean copy of the claim,</P>
          <P>(2) A claim chart showing where the disclosure of the patent or application provides written description of the subject matter of the claim, and</P>
          <P>(3) Where applicable, a copy of the claims annotated according to paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.120</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of basis for relief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The Board may require a party to provide a notice stating the relief it requests and the basis for its entitlement to relief. The Board may provide for the notice to be maintained in confidence for a limited time.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Effect.</E> If a notice under paragraph (a) of this section is required, a party will be limited to filing substantive motions consistent with the notice. <PRTPAGE P="394"/>Ambiguities in the notice will be construed against the party. A notice is not evidence except as an admission by a party-opponent.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Correction.</E> A party may move to correct its notice. The motion should be filed promptly after the party becomes aware of the basis for the correction. A correction filed after the time set for filing notices will only be entered if entry would serve the interests of justice.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.121</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Motions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Types of motions</E>—(1) <E T="03">Substantive motions.</E> Consistent with the notice of requested relief, if any, and to the extent the Board authorizes, a party may file a motion:</P>
          <P>(i) To redefine the scope of the contested case,</P>
          <P>(ii) To change benefit accorded for the contested subject matter, or</P>
          <P>(iii) For judgment in the contested case.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Responsive motions.</E> The Board may authorize a party to file a motion to amend or add a claim, to change inventorship, or otherwise to cure a defect raised in a notice of requested relief or in a substantive motion.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Miscellaneous motions.</E> Any request for relief other than a substantive or responsive motion must be filed as a miscellaneous motion.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Burden of proof.</E> The party filing the motion has the burden of proof to establish that it is entitled to the requested relief.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Content of motions; oppositions and replies.</E> (1) Each motion must be filed as a separate paper and must include:</P>
          <P>(i) A statement of the precise relief requested,</P>
          <P>(ii) A statement of material facts (see paragraph (d) of this section), and</P>
          <P>(iii) A full statement of the reasons for the relief requested, including a detailed explanation of the significance of the evidence and the governing law, rules, and precedent.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Compliance with rules.</E> Where a rule in part 1 of this title ordinarily governs the relief sought, the motion must make any showings required under that rule in addition to any showings required in this part.</P>
          <P>(3) The Board may order additional showings or explanations as a condition for filing a motion.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Statement of material facts.</E> (1) Each material fact shall be set forth as a separate numbered sentence with specific citations to the portions of the record that support the fact.</P>
          <P>(2) The Board may require that the statement of material facts be submitted as a separate paper.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Claim charts.</E> Claim charts must be used in support of any paper requiring the comparison of a claim to something else, such as another claim, prior art, or a specification. Claim charts must accompany the paper as an appendix. Claim charts are not a substitute for appropriate argument and explanation in the paper.</P>
          <P>(f) The Board may order briefing on any issue that could be raised by motion.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.122</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oppositions and replies.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Oppositions and replies must comply with the content requirements for motions and must include a statement identifying material facts in dispute. Any material fact not specifically denied shall be considered admitted.</P>
          <P>(b) All arguments for the relief requested in a motion must be made in the motion. A reply may only respond to arguments raised in the corresponding opposition.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.123</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Default filing times.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A <E T="03">motion,</E> other than a miscellaneous motion, may only be filed according to a schedule the Board sets. The default times for acting are:</P>
          <P>(1) An <E T="03">opposition</E> is due 30 days after service of the motion.</P>
          <P>(2) A <E T="03">reply</E> is due 30 days after service of the opposition.</P>
          <P>(3) A <E T="03">responsive motion</E> is due 30 days after the service of the motion.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Miscellaneous motions.</E> (1) If no time for filing a specific miscellaneous motion is provided in this part or in a Board order:</P>
          <P>(i) The opposing party must be consulted prior to filing the miscellaneous motion, and</P>

          <P>(ii) If an opposing party plans to oppose the miscellaneous motion, the <PRTPAGE P="395"/>movant may not file the motion without Board authorization. Such authorization should ordinarily be obtained through a telephone conference including the Board and every other party to the proceeding. Delay in seeking relief may justify a denial of the motion.</P>
          <P>(2) An opposition may not be filed without authorization. The default times for acting are:</P>
          <P>(i) An <E T="03">opposition</E> to a miscellaneous motion is due five business days after service of the motion.</P>
          <P>(ii) A <E T="03">reply</E> to a miscellaneous motion opposition is due three business days after service of the opposition.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Exhibits.</E> Each exhibit must be filed and served with the first paper in which it is cited except as the Board may otherwise order.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.124</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Oral argument.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Request for oral argument.</E> A party may request an oral argument on an issue raised in a paper within five business days of the filing of the paper. The request must be filed as a separate paper and must specify the issues to be considered.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Copies for panel.</E> If an oral argument is set for a panel, the movant on any issue to be argued must provide three working copies of the motion, the opposition, and the reply. Each party is responsible for providing three working copies of its exhibits relating to the motion.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Length of argument.</E> If a request for oral argument is granted, each party will have a total of 20 minutes to present its arguments, including any time for rebuttal.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Demonstrative exhibits</E> must be served at least five business days before the oral argument and filed no later than the time of the oral argument.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Transcription.</E> The Board encourages the use of a transcription service at oral arguments but, if such a service is to be used, the Board must be notified in advance to ensure adequate facilities are available and a transcript must be filed with the Board promptly after the oral argument.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.125</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Decision on motions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Order of consideration.</E> The Board may take up motions for decisions in any order, may grant, deny, or dismiss any motion, and may take such other action appropriate to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of the proceeding. A decision on a motion may include deferral of action on an issue until a later point in the proceeding.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Interlocutory decisions.</E> A decision on motions without a judgment is not final for the purposes of judicial review. A panel decision on an issue will govern further proceedings in the contested case.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Rehearing</E>—(1) <E T="03">Time for request.</E> A request for rehearing of a decision on a motion must be filed within fourteen days of the decision.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">No tolling.</E> The filing of a request for rehearing does not toll times for taking action.</P>
          <P>(3) <E T="03">Burden on rehearing.</E> The burden of showing a decision should be modified lies with the party attacking the decision. The request must specifically identify:</P>
          <P>(i) All matters the party believes to have been misapprehended or overlooked, and</P>
          <P>(ii) The place where the matter was previously addressed in a motion, opposition, or reply.</P>
          <P>(4) <E T="03">Opposition; reply.</E> Neither an opposition nor a reply to a request for rehearing may be filed without Board authorization.</P>
          <P>(5) <E T="03">Panel rehearing.</E> If a decision is not a panel decision, the party requesting rehearing may request that a panel rehear the decision. A panel rehearing a procedural decision will review the decision for an abuse of discretion.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.126</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Arbitration.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Parties to a contested case may resort to binding arbitration to determine any issue in a contested case. The Office is not a party to the arbitration. The Board is not bound and may independently determine questions of patentability, jurisdiction, and Office practice.</P>
          <P>(b) The Board will not authorize arbitration unless:</P>
          <P>(1) It is to be conducted according to Title 9 of the United States Code.</P>
          <P>(2) The parties notify the Board in writing of their intention to arbitrate.</P>
          <P>(3) The agreement to arbitrate:<PRTPAGE P="396"/>
          </P>
          <P>(i) Is in writing,</P>
          <P>(ii) Specifies the issues to be arbitrated,</P>
          <P>(iii) Names the arbitrator, or provides a date not more than 30 days after the execution of the agreement for the selection of the arbitrator, and</P>
          <P>(iv) Provides that the arbitrator's award shall be binding on the parties and that judgment thereon can be entered by the Board.</P>
          <P>(4) A copy of the agreement is filed within 20 days after its execution.</P>
          <P>(5) The arbitration is completed within the time the Board sets.</P>
          <P>(c) The parties are solely responsible for the selection of the arbitrator and the conduct of proceedings before the arbitrator.</P>
          <P>(d) Issues not disposed of by the arbitration will be resolved in accordance with the procedures established in this subpart.</P>
          <P>(e) The Board will not consider the arbitration award unless it:</P>
          <P>(1) Is binding on the parties,</P>
          <P>(2) Is in writing,</P>
          <P>(3) States in a clear and definite manner each issue arbitrated and the disposition of each issue, and</P>
          <P>(4) Is filed within 20 days of the date of the award.</P>
          <P>(f) Once the award is filed, the parties to the award may not take actions inconsistent with the award. If the award is dispositive of the contested subject matter for a party, the Board may enter judgment as to that party.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.127</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Judgment.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Effect within Office</E>—(1) <E T="03">Estoppel</E>. A judgment disposes of all issues that were, or by motion could have properly been, raised and decided. A losing party who could have properly moved for relief on an issue, but did not so move, may not take action in the Office after the judgment that is inconsistent with that party's failure to move, except that a losing party shall not be estopped with respect to any contested subject matter for which that party was awarded a favorable judgment.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Final disposal of claim</E>. Adverse judgment against a claim is a final action of the Office requiring no further action by the Office to dispose of the claim permanently.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Request for adverse judgment</E>. A party may at any time in the proceeding request judgment against itself. Actions construed to be a request for adverse judgment include:</P>
          <P>(1) Abandonment of an involved application such that the party no longer has an application or patent involved in the proceeding,</P>
          <P>(2) Cancellation or disclaiming of a claim such that the party no longer has a claim involved in the proceeding,</P>
          <P>(3) Concession of priority or unpatentability of the contested subject matter, and</P>
          <P>(4) Abandonment of the contest.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Recommendation</E>. The judgment may include a recommendation for further action by the examiner or by the Director. If the Board recommends rejection of a claim of an involved application, the examiner must enter and maintain the recommended rejection unless an amendment or showing of facts not previously of record is filed which, in the opinion of the examiner, overcomes the recommended rejection.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Rehearing.</E> A party dissatisfied with the judgment may file a request for rehearing within 30 days of the entry of the judgment. The request must specifically identify all matters the party believes to have been misapprehended or overlooked, and the place where the matter was previously addressed in a motion, opposition, or reply.</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 58260, Sept. 30, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.128</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Sanctions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) The Board may impose a sanction against a party for misconduct, including:</P>
          <P>(1) Failure to comply with an applicable rule or order in the proceeding;</P>
          <P>(2) Advancing a misleading or frivolous request for relief or argument; or</P>
          <P>(3) Engaging in dilatory tactics.</P>
          <P>(b) Sanctions include entry of:</P>
          <P>(1) An order holding certain facts to have been established in the proceeding;</P>
          <P>(2) An order expunging, or precluding a party from filing, a paper;</P>

          <P>(3) An order precluding a party from presenting or contesting a particular issue;<PRTPAGE P="397"/>
          </P>
          <P>(4) An order precluding a party from requesting, obtaining, or opposing discovery;</P>
          <P>(5) An order excluding evidence;</P>
          <P>(6) An order awarding compensatory expenses, including attorney fees;</P>
          <P>(7) An order requiring terminal disclaimer of patent term; or</P>
          <P>(8) Judgment in the contested case.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.150</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Discovery.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Limited discovery</E>. A party is not entitled to discovery except as authorized in this subpart. The parties may agree to discovery among themselves at any time.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Automatic discovery</E>. (1) Within 21 days of a request by an opposing party, a party must:</P>
          <P>(i) Serve a legible copy of every requested patent, patent application, literature reference, and test standard mentioned in the specification of the party's involved patent or application, or application upon which the party will rely for benefit, and, if the requested material is in a language other than English, a translation, if available, and</P>
          <P>(ii) File with the Board a notice (without copies of the requested materials) of service of the requested materials.</P>
          <P>(2) Unless previously served, or the Board orders otherwise, any exhibit cited in a motion or in testimony must be served with the citing motion or testimony.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Additional discovery</E>. (1) A party may request additional discovery. The requesting party must show that such additional discovery is in the interests of justice. The Board may specify conditions for such additional discovery.</P>
          <P>(2) When appropriate, a party may obtain production of documents and things during cross examination of an opponent's witness or during testimony authorized under § 41.156.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.151</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Admissibility.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Evidence that is not taken, sought, or filed in accordance with this subpart shall not be admissible.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.152</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Applicability of the Federal Rules of Evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Generally</E>. Except as otherwise provided in this subpart, the Federal Rules of Evidence shall apply to contested cases.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Exclusions</E>. Those portions of the Federal Rules of Evidence relating to criminal proceedings, juries, and other matters not relevant to proceedings under this subpart shall not apply.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Modifications in terminology</E>. Unless otherwise clear from context, the following terms of the Federal Rules of Evidence shall be construed as indicated:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Appellate court</E> means United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or a United States district court when judicial review is under 35 U.S.C. 146.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Civil action, civil proceeding, action,</E> and <E T="03">trial</E> mean contested case.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Courts of the United States, U.S. Magistrate, court, trial court,</E> and <E T="03">trier of fact</E> mean Board.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Hearing</E> means:</P>
          <P>(i) In Federal Rule of Evidence 703, the time when the expert testifies.</P>
          <P>(ii) In Federal Rule of Evidence 804(a)(5), the time for taking testimony.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Judge</E> means the Board.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Judicial notice</E> means official notice.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Trial or hearing</E> means, in Federal Rule of Evidence 807, the time for taking testimony.</P>
          <P>(d) The Board, in determining foreign law, may consider any relevant material or source, including testimony, whether or not submitted by a party or admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.153</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Records of the Office.</SUBJECT>
          <P>Certification is not necessary as a condition to admissibility when the evidence to be submitted is a record of the Office to which all parties have access.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.154</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Form of evidence.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Evidence consists of affidavits, transcripts of depositions, documents, and things. All evidence must be submitted in the form of an exhibit.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Translation required</E>. When a party relies on a document or is required to produce a document in a language other than English, a translation of the document into English and an affidavit <PRTPAGE P="398"/>attesting to the accuracy of the translation must be filed with the document.</P>
          <P>(c) An exhibit must conform with the requirements for papers in § 41.106 of this subpart and the requirements of this paragraph.</P>

          <P>(1) Each exhibit must have an exhibit label with a unique number in a range assigned by the Board, the names of the parties, and the proceeding number in the following format:
          </P>
          <FP>JONES EXHIBIT 2001</FP>
          <FP>Jones v. Smith</FP>
          <FP>Contested Case 104,999</FP>
          
          <P>(2) When the exhibit is a paper:</P>
          <P>(i) Each page must be uniquely numbered in sequence, and</P>
          <P>(ii) The exhibit label must be affixed to the lower right corner of the first page of the exhibit without obscuring information on the first page or, if obscuring is unavoidable, affixed to a duplicate first page.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Exhibit list</E>. Each party must maintain an exhibit list with the exhibit number and a brief description of each exhibit. If the exhibit is not filed, the exhibit list should note that fact. The Board may require the filing of a current exhibit list prior to acting on a motion.</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 58260, Sept. 30, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.155</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Objection; motion to exclude; motion in limine.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Deposition</E>. Objections to deposition evidence must be made during the deposition. Evidence to cure the objection must be provided during the deposition unless the parties to the deposition stipulate otherwise on the deposition record.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Other than deposition.</E> For evidence other than deposition evidence:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">Objection.</E> Any objection must be served within five business days of service of evidence, other than deposition evidence, to which the objection is directed.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Supplemental evidence.</E> The party relying on evidence for which an objection is timely served may respond to the objection by serving supplemental evidence within ten business days of service of the objection.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Motion to exclude</E>. A miscellaneous motion to exclude evidence must be filed to preserve any objection. The motion must identify the objections in the record in order and must explain the objections.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Motion in limine</E>. A party may file a miscellaneous motion in limine for a ruling on the admissibility of evidence.</P>
          <CITA>[69 FR 50003, Aug. 12, 2004, as amended at 69 FR 58260, Sept. 30, 2004]</CITA>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.156</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Compelling testimony and production.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Authorization required</E>. A party seeking to compel testimony or production of documents or things must file a miscellaneous motion for authorization. The miscellaneous motion must describe the general relevance of the testimony, document, or thing and must:</P>
          <P>(1) In the case of testimony, identify the witness by name or title, and</P>
          <P>(2) In the case of a document or thing, the general nature of the document or thing.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Outside the United States</E>. For testimony or production sought outside the United States, the motion must also:</P>
          <P>(1) <E T="03">In the case of testimony</E>. (i) Identify the foreign country and explain why the party believes the witness can be compelled to testify in the foreign country, including a description of the procedures that will be used to compel the testimony in the foreign country and an estimate of the time it is expected to take to obtain the testimony; and</P>
          <P>(ii) Demonstrate that the party has made reasonable efforts to secure the agreement of the witness to testify in the United States but has been unsuccessful in obtaining the agreement, even though the party has offered to pay the expenses of the witness to travel to and testify in the United States.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">In the case of production of a document or thing</E>. (i) Identify the foreign country and explain why the party believes production of the document or thing can be compelled in the foreign country, including a description of the procedures that will be used to compel production of the document or thing in the foreign country and an estimate of <PRTPAGE P="399"/>the time it is expected to take to obtain production of the document or thing; and</P>
          <P>(ii) Demonstrate that the party has made reasonable efforts to obtain the agreement of the individual or entity having possession, custody, or control of the document to produce the document or thing in the United States but has been unsuccessful in obtaining that agreement, even though the party has offered to pay the expenses of producing the document or thing in the United States.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.157</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Taking testimony.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Form</E>. Direct testimony must be submitted in the form of an affidavit except when the testimony is compelled under 35 U.S.C. 24, in which case it may be in the form of a deposition transcript.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Time and location</E>. (1) <E T="03">Uncompelled direct testimony</E> may be taken at any time; otherwise, testimony may only be taken during such time period as the Board may authorize.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Other testimony</E>. (i) Except as the Board otherwise orders, authorized testimony may be taken at any reasonable time and location within the United States before any disinterested official authorized to administer oaths at that location.</P>
          <P>(ii) Testimony outside the United States may only be taken as the Board specifically directs.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Notice of deposition</E>. (1) Prior to the taking of testimony, all parties to the proceeding must agree on the time and place for taking testimony. If the parties cannot agree, the party seeking the testimony must initiate a conference with the Board to set a time and place.</P>
          <P>(2) Cross-examination should ordinarily take place after any supplemental evidence relating to the direct testimony has been filed and more than a week before the filing date for any paper in which the cross-examination testimony is expected to be used. A party requesting cross-examination testimony of more than one witness may choose the order in which the witnesses are to be cross-examined.</P>
          <P>(3) In the case of direct testimony, at least three business days prior to the conference in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the party seeking the direct testimony must serve:</P>
          <P>(i) A list and copy of each document under the party's control and on which the party intends to rely, and</P>
          <P>(ii) A list of, and proffer of reasonable access to, any thing other than a document under the party's control and on which the party intends to rely.</P>
          <P>(4) Notice of the deposition must be filed at least two business days before a deposition. The notice limits the scope of the testimony and must list:</P>
          <P>(i) The time and place of the deposition,</P>
          <P>(ii) The name and address of the witness,</P>
          <P>(iii) A list of the exhibits to be relied upon during the deposition, and</P>
          <P>(iv) A general description of the scope and nature of the testimony to be elicited.</P>
          <P>(5) <E T="03">Motion to quash.</E> Objection to a defect in the notice is waived unless a miscellaneous motion to quash is promptly filed.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Deposition in a foreign language.</E> If an interpreter will be used during the deposition, the party calling the witness must initiate a conference with the Board at least five business days before the deposition.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Manner of taking testimony.</E> (1) Each witness before giving a deposition shall be duly sworn according to law by the officer before whom the deposition is to be taken. The officer must be authorized to take testimony under 35 U.S.C. 23.</P>
          <P>(2) The testimony shall be taken in answer to interrogatories with any questions and answers recorded in their regular order by the officer, or by some other disinterested person in the presence of the officer, unless the presence of the officer is waived on the record by agreement of all parties.</P>
          <P>(3) Any exhibits relied upon must be numbered according to the numbering scheme assigned for the contested case and must, if not previously served, be served at the deposition.</P>

          <P>(4) All objections made at the time of the deposition to the qualifications of the officer taking the deposition, the manner of taking it, the evidence presented, the conduct of any party, and any other objection to the proceeding <PRTPAGE P="400"/>shall be noted on the record by the officer. Evidence objected to shall be taken subject to a ruling on the objection.</P>
          <P>(5) When the testimony has been transcribed, the witness shall read and sign (in the form of an affidavit) a transcript of the deposition unless:</P>
          <P>(i) The parties otherwise agree in writing, (ii) The parties waive reading and signature by the witness on the record at the deposition, or</P>
          <P>(iii) The witness refuses to read or sign the transcript of the deposition.</P>
          <P>(6) The officer shall prepare a certified transcript by attaching to the transcript of the deposition a certificate in the form of an affidavit signed and sealed by the officer. Unless the parties waive any of the following requirements, in which case the certificate shall so state, the certificate must state:</P>
          <P>(i) The witness was duly sworn by the officer before commencement of testimony by the witness;</P>
          <P>(ii) The transcript is a true record of the testimony given by the witness;</P>
          <P>(iii) The name of the person who recorded the testimony and, if the officer did not record it, whether the testimony was recorded in the presence of the officer;</P>
          <P>(iv) The presence or absence of any opponent;</P>
          <P>(v) The place where the deposition was taken and the day and hour when the deposition began and ended;</P>
          <P>(vi) The officer has no disqualifying interest, personal or financial, in a party; and</P>
          <P>(vii) If a witness refuses to read or sign the transcript, the circumstances under which the witness refused.</P>
          <P>(7) The officer must promptly provide a copy of the transcript to all parties. The proponent of the testimony must file the original as an exhibit.</P>
          <P>(8) Any objection to the content, form, or manner of taking the deposition, including the qualifications of the officer, is waived unless made on the record during the deposition and preserved in a timely filed miscellaneous motion to exclude.</P>
          <P>(f) <E T="03">Costs.</E> Except as the Board may order or the parties may agree in writing, the proponent of the testimony shall bear all costs associated with the testimony, including the reasonable costs associated with making the witness available for the cross-examination.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.158</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Expert testimony; tests and data.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) Expert testimony that does not disclose the underlying facts or data on which the opinion is based is entitled to little or no weight. Testimony on United States patent law will not be admitted.</P>
          <P>(b) If a party relies on a technical test or data from such a test, the party must provide an affidavit explaining:</P>
          <P>(1) Why the test or data is being used,</P>
          <P>(2) How the test was performed and the data was generated,</P>
          <P>(3) How the data is used to determine a value,</P>
          <P>(4) How the test is regarded in the relevant art, and</P>
          <P>(5) Any other information necessary for the Board to evaluate the test and data.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBPART>
      <SUBPART>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Subpart E—Patent Interferences</HD>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.200</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Procedure; pendency.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) A patent interference is a contested case subject to the procedures set forth in subpart D of this part.</P>
          <P>(b) A claim shall be given its broadest reasonable construction in light of the specification of the application or patent in which it appears.</P>
          <P>(c) Patent interferences shall be administered such that pendency before the Board is normally no more than two years.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.201</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Definitions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>In addition to the definitions in §§ 41.2 and 41.100, the following definitions apply to proceedings under this subpart:</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Accord benefit</E> means Board recognition that a patent application provides a proper constructive reduction to practice under 35 U.S.C. 102(g)(1).</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Constructive reduction to practice</E> means a described and enabled anticipation under 35 U.S.C. 102(g)(1) in a patent application of the subject matter of a count. <E T="03">Earliest constructive reduction to practice</E> means the first constructive reduction to practice that has been continuously disclosed <PRTPAGE P="401"/>through a chain of patent applications including in the involved application or patent. For the chain to be continuous, each subsequent application must have been co-pending under 35 U.S.C. 120 or 121 or timely filed under 35 U.S.C. 119 or 365(a).</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Count</E> means the Board's description of the interfering subject matter that sets the scope of admissible proofs on priority. Where there is more than one count, each count must describe a patentably distinct invention.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Involved claim</E> means, for the purposes of 35 U.S.C. 135(a), a claim that has been designated as corresponding to the count.</P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Senior party</E> means the party entitled to the presumption under § 41.207(a)(1) that it is the prior inventor. Any other party is a <E T="03">junior party.</E>
          </P>
          <P>
            <E T="03">Threshold issue</E> means an issue that, if resolved in favor of the movant, would deprive the opponent of standing in the interference. Threshold issues may include:</P>
          <P>(1) No interference-in-fact, and</P>
          <P>(2) In the case of an involved application claim first made after the publication of the movant's application or issuance of the movant's patent:</P>
          <P>(i) Repose under 35 U.S.C. 135(b) in view of the movant's patent or published application, or</P>
          <P>(ii) Unpatentability for lack of written description under 35 U.S.C. 112(1) of an involved application claim where the applicant suggested, or could have suggested, an interference under § 41.202(a).</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.202</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Suggesting an interference.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Applicant.</E> An applicant, including a reissue applicant, may suggest an interference with another application or a patent. The suggestion must:</P>
          <P>(1) Provide sufficient information to identify the application or patent with which the applicant seeks an interference,</P>
          <P>(2) Identify all claims the applicant believes interfere, propose one or more counts, and show how the claims correspond to one or more counts,</P>
          <P>(3) For each count, provide a claim chart comparing at least one claim of each party corresponding to the count and show why the claims interfere within the meaning of § 41.203(a),</P>
          <P>(4) Explain in detail why the applicant will prevail on priority,</P>
          <P>(5) If a claim has been added or amended to provoke an interference, provide a claim chart showing the written description for each claim in the applicant's specification, and</P>
          <P>(6) For each constructive reduction to practice for which the applicant wishes to be accorded benefit, provide a chart showing where the disclosure provides a constructive reduction to practice within the scope of the interfering subject matter.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Patentee.</E> A patentee cannot suggest an interference under this section but may, to the extent permitted under § 1.99 and § 1.291 of this title, alert the examiner of an application claiming interfering subject matter to the possibility of an interference.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Examiner.</E> An examiner may require an applicant to add a claim to provoke an interference. Failure to satisfy the requirement within a period (not less than one month) the examiner sets will operate as a concession of priority for the subject matter of the claim. If the interference would be with a patent, the applicant must also comply with paragraphs (a)(2) through (a)(6) of this section. The claim the examiner proposes to have added must, apart from the question of priority under 35 U.S.C. 102(g):</P>
          <P>(1) Be patentable to the applicant, and</P>
          <P>(2) Be drawn to patentable subject matter claimed by another applicant or patentee.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Requirement to show priority under 35 U.S.C. 102(g).</E> (1) When an applicant has an earliest constructive reduction to practice that is later than the apparent earliest constructive reduction to practice for a patent or published application claiming interfering subject matter, the applicant must show why it would prevail on priority.</P>

          <P>(2) If an applicant fails to show priority under paragraph (d)(1) of this section, an administrative patent judge may nevertheless declare an interference to place the applicant under an order to show cause why judgment should not be entered against the applicant on priority. New evidence in support of priority will not be admitted except on a showing of good cause. The <PRTPAGE P="402"/>Board may authorize the filing of motions to redefine the interfering subject matter or to change the benefit accorded to the parties.</P>
          <P>(e) <E T="03">Sufficiency of showing.</E> (1) A showing of priority under this section is not sufficient unless it would, if unrebutted, support a determination of priority in favor of the party making the showing.</P>
          <P>(2) When testimony or production necessary to show priority is not available without authorization under § 41.150(c) or § 41.156(a), the showing shall include:</P>
          <P>(i) Any necessary interrogatory, request for admission, request for production, or deposition request, and</P>
          <P>(ii) A detailed proffer of what the response to the interrogatory or request would be expected to be and an explanation of the relevance of the response to the question of priority.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.203</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Declaration.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Interfering subject matter.</E> An interference exists if the subject matter of a claim of one party would, if prior art, have anticipated or rendered obvious the subject matter of a claim of the opposing party and vice versa.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Notice of declaration.</E> An administrative patent judge declares the patent interference on behalf of the Director. A notice declaring an interference identifies:</P>
          <P>(1) The interfering subject matter;</P>
          <P>(2) The involved applications, patents, and claims;</P>
          <P>(3) The accorded benefit for each count; and</P>
          <P>(4) The claims corresponding to each count.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Redeclaration.</E> An administrative patent judge may redeclare a patent interference on behalf of the Director to change the declaration made under paragraph (b) of this section.</P>
          <P>(d) A party may suggest the addition of a patent or application to the interference or the declaration of an additional interference. The suggestion should make the showings required under § 41.202(a) of this part.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.204</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Notice of basis for relief.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Priority statement.</E> (1) A party may not submit evidence of its priority in addition to its accorded benefit unless it files a statement setting forth all bases on which the party intends to establish its entitlement to judgment on priority.</P>
          <P>(2) The priority statement must:</P>
          <P>(i) State the date and location of the party's earliest corroborated conception,</P>
          <P>(ii) State the date and location of the party's earliest corroborated actual reduction to practice,</P>
          <P>(iii) State the earliest corroborated date on which the party's diligence began, and</P>
          <P>(iv) Provide a copy of the earliest document upon which the party will rely to show conception.</P>
          <P>(3) If a junior party fails to file a priority statement overcoming a senior party's accorded benefit, judgment shall be entered against the junior party absent a showing of good cause.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Other substantive motions.</E> The Board may require a party to list the motions it intends to file, including sufficient detail to place the Board and the opponent on notice of the precise relief sought.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Filing and service.</E> The Board will set the times for filing and serving statements required under this section.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.205</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Settlement agreements.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Constructive notice; time for filing.</E> Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 135(c), an agreement or understanding, including collateral agreements referred to therein, made in connection with or in contemplation of the termination of an interference must be filed prior to the termination of the interference between the parties to the agreement. After a final decision is entered by the Board, an interference is considered terminated when no appeal (35 U.S.C. 141) or other review (35 U.S.C. 146) has been or can be taken or had. If an appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (under 35 U.S.C. 141) or a civil action (under 35 U.S.C. 146) has been filed the interference is considered terminated when the appeal or civil action is terminated. A civil action is terminated when the time to appeal the judgment expires. An appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, whether from a decision of the Board or a judgment in a <PRTPAGE P="403"/>civil action, is terminated when the mandate is issued by the Court.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Untimely filing.</E> The Chief Administrative Patent Judge may permit the filing of an agreement under paragraph (a) of this section up to six months after termination upon petition and a showing of good cause for the failure to file prior to termination.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Request to keep separate.</E> Any party to an agreement under paragraph (a) of this section may request that the agreement be kept separate from the interference file. The request must be filed with or promptly after the agreement is filed.</P>
          <P>(d) <E T="03">Access to agreement.</E> Any person, other than a representative of a Government agency, may have access to an agreement kept separate under paragraph (c) of this section only upon petition and on a showing of good cause. The agreement will be available to Government agencies on written request.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.206</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Common interests in the invention.</SUBJECT>
          <P>An administrative patent judge may decline to declare, or if already declared the Board may issue judgment in, an interference between an application and another application or patent that are commonly owned.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.207</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Presumptions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>(a) <E T="03">Priority</E>—(1) <E T="03">Order of invention.</E> Parties are presumed to have invented interfering subject matter in the order of the dates of their accorded benefit for each count. If two parties are accorded the benefit of the same earliest date of constructive reduction to practice, then neither party is entitled to a presumption of priority with respect to the other such party.</P>
          <P>(2) <E T="03">Evidentiary standard.</E> Priority may be proved by a preponderance of the evidence except a party must prove priority by clear and convincing evidence if the date of its earliest constructive reduction to practice is after the issue date of an involved patent or the publication date under 35 U.S.C. 122(b) of an involved application or patent.</P>
          <P>(b) <E T="03">Claim correspondence.</E> (1) For the purposes of determining priority and derivation, all claims of a party corresponding to the count are presumed to stand or fall together. To challenge this presumption, a party must file a timely substantive motion to have a corresponding claim designated as not corresponding to the count. No presumption based on claim correspondence regarding the grouping of claims exists for other grounds of unpatentability.</P>
          <P>(2) A claim corresponds to a count if the subject matter of the count, treated as prior art to the claim, would have anticipated or rendered obvious the subject matter of the claim.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Cross-applicability of prior art.</E> When a motion for judgment of unpatentability against an opponent's claim on the basis of prior art is granted, each of the movant's claims corresponding to the same count as the opponent's claim will be presumed to be unpatentable in view of the same prior art unless the movant in its motion rebuts this presumption.</P>
        </SECTION>
        <SECTION>
          <SECTNO>§ 41.208</SECTNO>
          <SUBJECT>Content of substantive and responsive motions.</SUBJECT>
          <P>The general requirements for motions in contested cases are stated at § 41.121(c).</P>
          <P>(a) In an interference, substantive motions must:</P>
          <P>(1) Raise a threshold issue,</P>
          <P>(2) Seek to change the scope of the definition of the interfering subject matter or the correspondence of claims to the count,</P>
          <P>(3) Seek to change the benefit accorded for the count, or</P>
          <P>(4) Seek judgment on derivation or on priority.</P>
          <P>(b) To be sufficient, a motion must provide a showing, supported with appropriate evidence, such that, if unrebutted, it would justify the relief sought. The burden of proof is on the movant.</P>
          <P>(c) <E T="03">Showing patentability.</E> (1) A party moving to add or amend a claim must show the claim is patentable.</P>
          <P>(2) A party moving to add or amend a count must show the count is patentable over prior art.</P>
        </SECTION>
      </SUBPART>
    </PART>
    <SUBCHIND>
      <LRH>37 CFR Ch. I (7-1-07 Edition)</LRH>
      <RRH>Index III</RRH>
      <PRTPAGE P="405"/>
      <HD SOURCE="HED">INDEX III—RULES RELATING TO PRACTICE BEFORE THE PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE</HD>
      <EDNOTE>
        <HD SOURCE="HED">Editorial Note:</HD>
        <P>This listing is provided for informational purposes only. It is compiled and kept current by the Department of Commerce. This index is updated as of July 1, 2007.</P>
      </EDNOTE>
      <SECHD>Section</SECHD>
      <ALPHHD>A</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Address change</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.11, 11.11</PT>
      <SUBJL>Advertising</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.31, 10.32</PT>
      <SUBJL>Agreements restricting practice</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.38</PT>
      <SUBJL>Aliens</SUBJL>
      <PT>  11.6, 11.9</PT>
      <SUBJL>Applicant for patent, representation of</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.31,  11.10</PT>
      <SUBJL>Applicant for trademark, representation of</SUBJL>
      <PT>2.11</PT>
      <SUBJL>Attorneys, recognition of to practice in trademark cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.14</PT>
      <SUBJL>Attorneys, registration of to practice in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT> 11.6, 11.9</PT>
      <ALPHHD>B</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Breach of trust</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Business transactions or relations with client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.65</PT>
      <ALPHHD>C</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Candidate for judicial office</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.103</PT>
      <SUBJL>Canons and Disciplinary Rules</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.20-10.112</PT>
      <SUBJL>Certificate of mailing</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.8, 10.23. 10.141</PT>
      <SUBJL>Circumventing a disciplinary rule, amendment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Code of Professional Responsibility</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.20-10.112</PT>
      <SUBJL>Coercion, use of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Committee on Discipline</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.4</PT>
      <SUBJL>Communicating with person having adverse interest</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.67</PT>
      <SUBJL>Communications concerning practitioner's service</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.31</PT>
      <SUBJL>Compensation for legal services</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.68</PT>
      <SUBJL>Competence</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.76, 10.77</PT>
      <SUBJL>Complaint instituting disciplinary proceedings</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.134</PT>
      <SUBJL>Concealment of material information</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Conduct in proceeding before Office</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.89</PT>
      <SUBJL>Conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Conflict of interest</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.66</PT>
      <SUBJL>Conviction of criminal offense</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <ALPHHD>D</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Deceit</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Decisions of the Commissioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.156, 10.157</PT>
      <SUBJECT>Definitions:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Affidavit</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Agent</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.6</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Application</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Canon</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.20</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Confidence</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.57</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Differing interests</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1<PRTPAGE P="406"/>
      </PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Director of Enrollment and Discipline</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1, 11.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Disciplinary rule</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.20</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Employee of a tribunal</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Excessive legal fees</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.36</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Excluded practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Giving information</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Invention development services</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Law firm</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Lawyer</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Legal counsel</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Legal profession</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Legal service</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Legal system</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Non-practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Office</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1, 11.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Person</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1, 11.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Proceeding before the Office</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1, 11.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Professional legal corporation</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Registration</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1, 11.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Respondent</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.134</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Secret</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.33, 10.57</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Service of Process</SUBJL>
      <PT>15.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">State</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1, 11.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Suspended practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Testimony by employees</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Tribunal</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">United States</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.1</PT>
      <SUBJL>Designation as registered attorney or agent</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.34</PT>
      <SUBJL>Direct contact with prospective clients</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.33</PT>
      <SUBJL>Director of Enrollment and Discipline</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review of decisions of the Director</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.2</PT>
      <SUBJL>Disbarment from practice on ethical grounds</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.130</PT>
      <SUBJL>Discharge of attorney or agent by client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.40</PT>
      <SUBJECT>Disciplinary Proceedings and Investigations:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.139</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Administrative Procedures Act</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.132, 10.144</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review of interlocutory orders by Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.139</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Amendment of complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.145</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Amendment of pleadings</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.145</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Answer to complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.136</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Appeal of initial decision of Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.155</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Burden of proof</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.149</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Certificate of mailing</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.8, 10.141</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.134</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Contested case</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.138</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Deliberations of Committee on Discipline</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.4</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Discovery (see also Discovery in Disciplinary Proceedings)</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Exception to ruling</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.150</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Filing papers after complaint filed</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.141</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Hearings before Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.144</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Initial decision of Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.139, 10.154</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Initiating disciplinary proceeding</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.132</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Investigations of violations of disciplinary rules</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.131</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Notice of suspension or exclusion of practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.159</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Objections to evidence</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.150</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Post hearing memorandum</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.153</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Pre-hearing statement</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.153<PRTPAGE P="407"/>
      </PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Reinstatement of suspended or excluded practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.160</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Reprimand of registered attorney or agent</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.130, 10.132</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Resignation of practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.133</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review of Commissioner's final decision</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.157</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review of decision denying reinstatement of practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Savings clause</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.161</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Service of complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.135</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Settlement of complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.133</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Stay pending review of interlocutory order</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.139</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Supplemental complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.137</PT>
      <SUBJL>Disciplinary rule violation, disclosure of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23, 10.24, 10.84, 10.85, 10.131</PT>
      <SUBJL>Discourteous conduct</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.89</PT>
      <SUBJECT>Discovery in Disciplinary Proceedings:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Copying of documents</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Cross-examination</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Deliberations of Committee on Enrollment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.4</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Depositions</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.151</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Evidence</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.150, 10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Impeachment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Inspection of documents</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Interrogatories</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Motions filed with Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.143, 10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Privileged information</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Undue delay in proceedings</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.152</PT>
      <SUBJL>Division of legal fees</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.37</PT>
      <SUBJL>Duress, use of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Duty to make counsel available</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.30</PT>
      <ALPHHD>E</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJECT>Employee testimony. (See Testimony by Office employee)</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJECT>Employment:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Acceptance</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.39</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Failure to carry out contract</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.84</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Refusing employment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.62, 10.63</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Withdrawal from employment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.40, 10.63</PT>
      <SUBJL>Exception to ruling</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.151</PT>
      <SUBJL>Excessive legal fees</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.36</PT>
      <SUBJL>Exclusion of practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.130, 10.132, 10.158</PT>
      <ALPHHD>F</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Failure to disclose material fact with regard to registration</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.22</PT>
      <SUBJL>Failure to notify client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>False accusations</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>False statements concerning officials</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.102</PT>
      <SUBJL>Favors, improperly bestowing</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJECT>Fees:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">In general</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.21</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Petition to review decision of Director of Enrollment and Discipline</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Registration</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.8</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Registration examination</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Reinstatement</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.11</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Request regard of examination</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.6</PT>
      <SUBJL>Fees for legal services</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.36</PT>
      <SUBJL>Firm name, use of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.35</PT>
      <SUBJL>Fitness to practice before the Office</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Foreigners</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.14, 11.6, 11.9<PRTPAGE P="408"/>
      </PT>
      <SUBJL>Former Patent and Trademark Office employees</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.6, 10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Fraud or inequitable conduct</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23, 10.85</PT>
      <SUBJL>Frivolous complaint</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Funds of client, preserving identity of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.112</PT>
      <ALPHHD>G</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Gift, improperly bestowing</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Government employees, registration of to practice in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.10</PT>
      <ALPHHD>I</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Illegal conduct involving moral turpitude</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Illegal fees for services</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.36</PT>
      <SUBJL>Improper alteration of patent application</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Improper execution of oath or declaration</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Improper influence</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Improper signature</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.18, 10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Improperly bestowing thing of value</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Incompetence</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.77, 10.78</PT>
      <SUBJL>Indecent statement, making of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Independent professional judgment, exercise of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.61, 10.62, 10.66, 10.68</PT>
      <SUBJL>Individual unqualified in respect to character, education, etc</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.7, 10.22</PT>
      <SUBJL>Influence by others than client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.68</PT>
      <SUBJL>Information precluding registration, failure to disclose</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Initial decision of Administrative Law Judge</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.139, 10.154</PT>
      <SUBJL>Integrity and competence of the legal profession, maintaining of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.22</PT>
      <SUBJL>Interest in litigation or proceeding before Office, acquiring of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.64</PT>
      <SUBJL>Investigations of violations of disciplinary rules</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.131</PT>
      <ALPHHD>J</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Joint venture</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Judicial office, candidate for</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.103</PT>
      <ALPHHD>L</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJECT>Legal Fees:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Division of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.37</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Failure to pay</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.40</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Sharing of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.48</PT>
      <SUBJL>Legal system, assistance in improving the</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.100</PT>
      <SUBJL>Letterheads, use of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.35</PT>
      <SUBJL>Limited recognition to practice in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.9</PT>
      <ALPHHD>M</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Malpractice, limiting client's liability</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.78</PT>
      <SUBJL>Materially false statements in application for registration</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.22</PT>
      <SUBJL>Misappropriation of funds</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Misconduct</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Misrepresentations</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.22, 10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Multiple employment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.66</PT>
      <ALPHHD>N</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Neglecting legal matters</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.77</PT>
      <SUBJL>Non-practitioner, formation of partnership with</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.49</PT>
      <SUBJL>Notice of suspension or exclusion</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.159<PRTPAGE P="409"/>
      </PT>
      <ALPHHD>O</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Oath requirement</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.8</PT>
      <SUBJL>Officials, contact with</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.93</PT>
      <ALPHHD>P</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJECT>Petitions:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Fees in general</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.21</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Reinstatement</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.160</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review decision of Commissioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.157</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review decision of Director of Enrollment and Discipline</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Suspension of rules</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.170</PT>
      <SUBJL>Preserve secrets and confidence of client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.56, 10.57</PT>
      <SUBJL>Pro-se applicant</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.31, 2.11</PT>
      <SUBJL>Professional impropriety, avoiding appearance of</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.110, 10.111</PT>
      <SUBJL>Promise of advantage, offer of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Property of client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.112</PT>
      <SUBJL>Proprietary interest in subject matter</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.64</PT>
      <SUBJL>Publication in <E T="03">Official Gazette</E>
      </SUBJL>
      <PT>10.11, 10.159, 10.160</PT>
      <ALPHHD>R</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJECT>Recognition to Practice Before the Patent and Trademark Office:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Agents</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.14, 11.6, 11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Aliens</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.14, 11.6, 11.9</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Attorneys</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.14, 11.6, 11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Change of address, requirement to notify Director</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.11, 11.11</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ2L">Person not suspended or excluded</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ2L">Suspended or excluded practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.160</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Examination of registration in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Examination fee</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Foreigners</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.14, 11.6, 11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Former Patent and Trademark Office employees</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.10, 10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Government employees</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.23, 11.10</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Limited recognition in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.9</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Non-lawyers, recognition in trademark cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.10</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.6-11.10</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Recognition for representation</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.34, 2.17, 10.14</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Recognition to practice</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.6-10.18</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Refusal to recognize practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.15</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Register of attorneys and agents in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.5</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Registration fee</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.8</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Registration number</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.34</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Removal of attorneys and agents from the register</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.11, 11.11</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Representation by registered attorney or agent in patent cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>1.31</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Requirements for registration</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.7</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Review of Director's decision refusing registration</SUBJL>
      <PT>11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Trademark cases</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.14</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Unauthorized representation by an agent</SUBJL>
      <PT> 10.31, 11.10</PT>
      <SUBJL>Records, property and funds of client, maintaining of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.112</PT>
      <SUBJL>Reinstatement after removal from the register</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.11, 11.2</PT>
      <SUBJL>Reinstatement of suspended or excluded non-practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.160</PT>
      <SUBJL>Representing client within bounds of the law</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.85</PT>
      <SUBJL>Reprimand of registered attorney or agent</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.130, 10.132</PT>
      <SUBJL>Resignation</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.133</PT>
      <SUBJL>Revocation of power of attorney in trademark case</SUBJL>
      <PT>2.19<PRTPAGE P="410"/>
      </PT>
      <ALPHHD>S</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Scandalous statements, making of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Secrets and confidence, preservation of clients</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.56, 10.57</PT>
      <SUBJECT>Service of process:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Acceptance of service of process</SUBJL>
      <PT>15.3</PT>
      <SUBJECT SOURCE="SUBJECT1">Definition</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Scope and purpose</SUBJL>
      <PT>15.2</PT>
      <SUBJL>Settlement of claims of clients</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.67</PT>
      <SUBJL>Sharing legal fees</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.48</PT>
      <SUBJL>Signature and certificate of practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.18</PT>
      <SUBJL>Solicitation</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.32, 10.33</PT>
      <SUBJL>Statement concerning officials, making false</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.102</PT>
      <SUBJL>Suspension of practitioner</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23, 10.130, 10.132, 10.158</PT>
      <SUBJL>Suspension of rules</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.170</PT>
      <ALPHHD>T</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJECT>Testimony of Office employees:</SUBJECT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Definition</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.2</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">General rule</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.4</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Office policy</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.3</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Private litigation</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.6</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Proceedings involving the United States</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.5</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Production of documents</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.4</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Scope</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.1</PT>
      <SUBJL SOURCE="SUBJ1L">Subpoena of Office employees</SUBJL>
      <PT>15a.7</PT>
      <SUBJL>Threats of criminal prosecution</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.88</PT>
      <SUBJL>Threats, use of</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <ALPHHD>U</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Unauthorized practice</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.14, 10.23, 10.31, 10.46, 10.47</PT>
      <SUBJL>Undignified conduct</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.89</PT>
      <ALPHHD>V</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Violating duty of candor and good faith</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Violation of disciplinary rule, misconduct</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.23</PT>
      <ALPHHD>W</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Withdrawal from employment</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.40</PT>
      <SUBJL>Withdrawal material information</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.22, 10.23</PT>
      <SUBJL>Witnesses</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.63, 10.92</PT>
      <ALPHHD>Z</ALPHHD>
      <SUBJL>Zealously representing the client</SUBJL>
      <PT>10.83, 10.84</PT>
      <LRH>37 CFR Ch. I (7-1-07 Edition)</LRH>
      <RRH>U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Commerce</RRH>
    </SUBCHIND>
  </SUBCHAP>
</CFRGRANULE>
