The accelerated examination
system and the accelerated appeal examination system permit an examination or
appeal to be conducted more quickly than through the regular examination and
appeal systems. Accelerated examination is available for any patent application
for which there is a corresponding foreign application (in the same PCT family
or by a claim for priority under the Paris Convention). The accelerated
examination can be requested for most patent applications filed by foreign
applicants. According to the Japan Patent Office (JPO), the first action (FA)
will be issued within 3 (three) months from the request. Requesting an accelerated
examination differs from using the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) in that the
accelerated examination requires an explanation of the features distinguishing
the invention of the present application over the prior art, and the claims need
not be substantially identical to the claims found to be patentable by a foreign
patent office.
The
conditions for requesting an accelerated examination are:
1)
A counterpart patent application has been filed in a country other than
2)
A request for examination has been filed with the JPO.
3)
A FA has not yet been issued by the JPO.
1.
Advantages of requesting an accelerated examination or an accelerated appeal
examination
Compared to the regular
examination system, examination results are obtained more quickly through the
accelerated system. The average pendency until the FA under the accelerated
system was about 1.9 months, in 2012, which is much shorter than under the
regular examination system.
In 2012, when an accelerated
appeal examination was requested, the average time until an appeal decision was
made and dispatched was 3.3 months from the date that the accelerated appeal
examination was requested.
2.
Applications and Appeals eligible for the accelerated examination system
Currently, the system may be
applied to the following six types of applications and appeals against an
examiners' decision of refusal:
i) "Working-related applications"
An application filed by an
applicant or a licensee who has already commercialized the invention or plans
to commercialize the invention within 2 (two) years from the filing date of
the request for an accelerated examination.
ii)
"Internationally-filed applications"
a) An application that has
been filed with both the JPO and at least one foreign IP office;
b) An application that has
been filed with an IP office as the Receiving Office under the PCT and has
entered into the national phase in
c) An application that has
been filed with the JPO as a domestic application and was also filed with the Receiving
Office under the PCT.
iii)
"Applications filed by Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs),
individuals, universities, public research institutes etc."
Applicants, in whole or in
part, who are SMEs, individuals, universities or public research institutes, or
approved or authorized Technology Licensing Organizations (TLOs).
iv)
"Green-related applications"
An application that seeks a
patent for a “Green Invention” (an invention that has an energy-saving effect
and contributes to CO2 reduction).
v)
"Earthquake Disaster Recovery Support-related applications"
An invention relating to
patent applications, design registration applications, trademark registration
applications or appeals against an examiner’s rejection related with the
aforementioned applications that fall under the following (a) or (b).
a) Applications and appeals
against an examiner’s rejection in which at least one of the applicants has an
address or temporary residence in specified affected areas (http://www.meti.go.jp/english/press/2011/0728_02.html - this link has been expired) and applications by people affected by
the Great East Japan Earthquake (Tohoku Earthquake) and related disasters of
March 11, 2011.
b) An applicant who is an
incorporated entity, and the incorporated entity’s business establishment is in
the specified affected areas which suffered damage from the Great East Japan
Earthquake (Tohoku Earthquake) and related disasters of March 11, 2011, and the
applicant intends to file an application for (1) an invention, (2) a design, or
(3) a trademark related to the business operations of any of the business
establishments listed below, or file an appeal against an examiner’s rejection
related to any of the above-mentioned applications.
(1) An invention created or
licensed as a business operation of a business establishment;
(2) A design created or
licensed as a business operation of a business establishment; or
(3) A trademark used as a
business operation of a business establishment.
vi)
"The Asian Business Location Law-related applications"
Applications relating to the
technology invented as the result of research and development activities
accredited by the Asian Business Location Law.
Please use the following
link for an overview of the Asian Business Location Law
(http://www.jetro.go.jp/en/invest/newsroom/pdf/2012/20120831_overview.pdf).
vii)
Accelerated Appeal Examination only.
An appeal related to an
application in which a person who is not an appellant (third party) has
exploited or worked the invention as a business after the appeal case has been
published and prior to the rendering of the appeal decision.
3.
Applicants eligible for the accelerated examination/accelerated appeal
examination
Any applicant (appellant)
for the accelerated appeal examination who does not have an address nor
domicile in Japan must perform the procedure through a representative who has
an address or domicile in Japan (for example, a Japanese patent attorney). A
third party may not request an accelerated appeal examination for another
persons’ application or appeal.
4.
Procedures for the accelerated examination and accelerated appeal examination
The applicant
shall submit:
1)
The results of a prior art search performed by a foreign patent office or by
the applicant. A copy of an information disclosure statement submitted to
the USPTO is also acceptable.
2)
A request for an accelerated appeal examination will be made by submitting a
“Written explanation of the needs of the accelerated appeal examination”. The
circumstances related to the filing of an accelerated appeal examination must
be described, the prior art documents must be disclosed, and an explanation of
the similarities to the invention and the prior art, etc., must be provided in
the “Written explanation of the needs of the accelerated appeal examination”.
The latter explanation may be omitted if the prior art and the distinguishing
features of the invention are described in the specification.
There is no charge to file a
request for an accelerated appeal examination.
Super Accelerated Examination
Outline
of Accelerated Examination and Accelerated Appeal Examination
1.
Introduction
The super accelerated
examination system has been available since October 2008 and is designed such
that the First Action (FA) will be issued within 1 (one) month from the request
for a super accelerated examination (within 2 (two) months for Designated
Office (DO) applications), and another examination will be performed within 1
(one) month from the submission of the written opinion/amendment (response to
the FA by the applicant). This further reduces the time from the request for
examination to the final decision compared to the regular accelerated
examination system. High priority applications, which meet the requirements for
"Internationally filed applications" or for "Working-related
applications" of the regular accelerated examination system are the focus
of the super accelerated examination system.
Unlike the normal
accelerated examination, the super accelerated examination is only applicable
to applications filed electronically, thus, PCT applications are excluded from
super accelerated examination. Another difference is that the
applicant must respond to an office action within 2 (two) months. This period
may not be extended. Failure to respond within this time frame will cause the
examination to be converted from a super accelerated examination to an accelerated
examination as long as the conditions for accelerated examination are satisfied
There were about 400
requests for super accelerated examination in 2010. The average FA pendency of
applications handled under the super accelerated examination system in 2010 was
about 25 days from the date on which the super accelerated examination was
requested.
Additionally, in 2010, the
average period from the request to the final decision was about 50 days, compared
with an average of about 170 days under the regular accelerated examination
system.
2.
Super accelerated examination
system basics
(A)
Applications eligible for super
accelerated examination
All applications including
DO applications, which meet the requirements described in (1) to (5) below, are
eligible for the super accelerated examination.
(1)
A counterpart application has been filed in a foreign country.
(2)
It is intended that the claimed invention will be used in
(3)
The application has not entered the Japanese national phase of a PCT
application.
(4)
A request for examination has been filed with the JPO.
(5)
The FA has not yet been issued by the JPO.
(B)
Internationally filed applications and Working-related applications
Highly important
applications which meet the requirements both for Internationally filed
applications (1) or for Working-related applications (2), are eligible for
super accelerated examination.
(C)
Applications for which all procedures have been performed online 4 weeks before
the date of filing of the request for super accelerated examination.
(D)
The application shall not be withdrawn under Article 42(1) of the Patent Act.
An applicant may request
Super Accelerated Examination by submitting:
1)
The results of a prior art search performed by a foreign patent office or by
the applicant. A copy of an information disclosure statement submitted to
the USPTO is also acceptable.
2)
An explanation of distinguishing features of the claimed invention over the
prior art cited in the search report. This explanation may be omitted if
the prior art and the distinguishing features are already described in the
specification as submitted.
3)
Evidence demonstrating that the claimed invention is intended for use in
(E)
First action pendency
For normal domestic
applications, FA pendency is 1 (one) month or less from the date that the
request for super accelerated examination was filed. For DO applications, FA
pendency is 2 (two) months or less from the date of filing the request for
super accelerated examination. However, for DO applications, depending on the
type of application and the filing timing, there may be a time delay in the
processing of the documents at the WIPO. In such cases, the FA pendency might extend
beyond 2 (two) months.
(F)
Response Period for applicants
The period for applicants to
respond is 30 (thirty) days from the date of sending the notification for
reasons of refusal (two months for overseas applicants). Should the applicant
not respond within 30 days of the sending of the FA, the application which was
being handled under the super accelerated examination system shall be handled
as a regular accelerated examination.
(G)
Second or any subsequent action pendency period
The second or any subsequent
action pendency will be 1 (one) month or less for all applications including DO
applications. This has the effect of shortening the period of time to make a
final decision.
As shown below, the super
accelerated examination reaches a final conclusive decision faster than the
regular accelerated examination.
[Comparison
between the accelerated examination and the super accelerated examination]
(H) Exceptional handling during pendency
Should an examination be
prolonged due to unavoidable reasons, the case shall be excluded from the list
of eligible applications and shall be handled under the regular accelerated
examination system.
Recently, there have been
discussions at the JPO with regards to loosening the requirements in order to
file applications using the Super Accelerated Examination program, but these
changes which would more than likely eliminate the requirement of also having a
corresponding foreign application filed, seem geared to assisting Japanese
companies, particularly SMEs, use this system. As of July 2018, this had not
progressed beyond the initial discussion stages at the JPO.
Preferred Examination
A preferred examination
may be requested by the applicant or a third party if it is alleged that the third
party is producing and/or using the invention for which a patent is
sought. Upon accepting a request for preferred examination of an
application, the examination of the application is made a priority.
The
conditions for preferred examination are:
(1)
A third party is using the invention for which a patent is sought.
(2)
The patent application has been published.
(3)
A letter of warning has been sent notifying the third party that its action (production
and/or use of the invention) falls within the scope of protection that would be
provided by the claims if a patent is granted.
(4)
A request for examination has been filed with the JPO.
(5)
A patent has not yet been issued by the JPO.
The
applicant may request preferred examination by submitting:
(1)
Evidence demonstrating that a product which would be covered if the claim(s)
were granted is being produced and sold or a method(s) covered by the claim(s)
is being used by a third party.
(2)
When the request is made by the applicant, an explanation of why the product
being produced and sold or a method(s) being used by the third party is covered
by the claim(s) of the application, and a copy of the warning letter.
(3)
When the request is made by the third party, an explanation of why the product
being produced and sold or a method(s) being used is not covered by the claim(s)
of the patent that may be granted.