How does the USPTO treat claims held “not invalid” by a federal court in reexamination?

The USPTO may still reexamine claims that have been held “not invalid” by a federal court. According to MPEP § 2259:

“Claims finally held as ‘not invalid’ by a federal court, after all appeals, may still be subject to reexamination.”

This means that even if a court has upheld the validity of certain claims, the USPTO retains the authority to reexamine those claims. The MPEP further references the case In re Construction Equipment Company, stating:

“The majority did not adopt the dissent view that reexamination of claims finally held as ‘not invalid’ by a federal court was barred by claim preclusion (res judicata) or issue preclusion (collateral estoppel).”

This underscores the USPTO’s position that court decisions upholding claim validity do not prevent the Office from conducting its own reexamination of those claims.

To learn more:

Topics: MPEP 2200 - Citation Of Prior Art And Ex Parte Reexamination Of Patents, MPEP 2259 - Res Judicata And Collateral Estoppel In Reexamination Proceedings, Patent Law, Patent Procedure
Tags: Federal Court Decisions, Not Invalid Claims, USPTO