What is priority?
Patent priority
relates to the issue of who is entitled to a patent
when two different inventors create the same invention and seek patents on
those inventions. For example, suppose that Inventor A invents a Gadget in
1990 and files a patent
application in
1992. Meanwhile, Inventor B invents the same Gadget in 1991 (after
Inventor A invented his) but files his patent application that same year, in
1991 (before Inventor A
filed his patent application). So Inventor A invented the Gadget first,
but Inventor B filed his patent application first. The issue of who gets
the patent is the issue of “patent priority.”
In the United States,
the issue of patent priority is determined by the so-called “first to invent”
rule. So in the above example, because Inventor Ainvented his Gadget first, he will get the
patent, even though Inventor B filed his patent application first. Most
foreign countries, however, use an alternative rule called the “first to file”
rule. This rule focuses on the filing of the patent application, rather
than on the date of invention. So in the same example under this rule,
Inventor B would get the patent because he filed first, even though Inventor A invented
his Gadget first.
It should be noted
that Congress has recently discussed amending the United States patent laws so
that the issue of patent priority is decided by the “first to file” rule used
by most other nations, thereby harmonizing United States patent law with the
rest of the world’s patent laws.
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