MEMORANDUM OPINION
The pro se plaintiff, owner of United States Patent No. 8,533,097 (“the ’097 patent”), brings this action pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 154(b)(4)(A), arguing that the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) awarded him an inadequate patent term adjustment (“PTA”) on two grounds. Specifically, plaintiff argues (i) that plaintiff should be awarded credit for time attributable to various delays caused by the PTO during the continued examination of the ’097 patent application at plaintiffs request pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 132(b), and (ii) that the time period re-
I.
Before setting forth the pertinent facts, it is useful to describe briefly the relevant statutory context. Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 154(a)(2), a patent has a term of twenty years from the patent application’s filing date, not the date the patent issues. Thus, because it takes time to process a patent application, the enforceable term for a patent is effectively less than 20 years. In light of this, as the Federal Circuit has noted, “[t]o account for any undue delays in patent examination caused by the PTO, Congress established a system of [PTA] to compensate inventors for lost time on their patent term resulting from such delays.” Pfizer v. Lee,
(i) a so-called “A-Delay,” pursuant to § 154(b)(1)(A), “awarding] PTA for delays arising from the [PTO’s] failure to act by certain examination deadlines”;
(ii) a so-called “B-Delay,” pursuant to § 154(b)(1)(B), “awarding] PTA for an application pendency exceeding three years”; and
(iii) a so-called “C-Delay,” pursuant to § 154(b)(1)(C), “award[ing] PTA for delays due to interferences, secrecy orders, and appeals,”
Pfizer,
Importantly, when a patent application is rejected, the patent applicant may (i) appeal the final rejection to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“PTAB”), 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), or (ii) file a timely request for continued examination, id. § 132(b). If the patent applicant chooses to appeal the PTO’s final rejection and is successful on appeal, the applicant is entitled to PTA credit for the entirety of the. pendency of the appeal, as that time period constitutes “C-Delay.” Id. § 154(b)(1)(C)(iii). If the patent applicant instead files a request for continued examination, “the [PTO] will withdraw the finality of [the] Office action,!’ and will consider any additional information submitted by the applicant in support of patentability. 37 C.F.R, § 1.114. Importantly, a patent applicant’s decision to request continued examination rather than filing a PTAB appeal comes at a cost for the applicant with respect to the PTA calculation. Specifically, although applicants are generally entitled to “B-Delay” for any delay “due to failure of the [PTO] to issue a patent within 3 years after the actual filing date of the application,” id. § 154(b)(1)(B), the statute expressly excludes three time periods from the accrual of a B-Delay, one of which is “any time consumed by continued examination of the application requested by the applicant.” Id. § 154(b)(l)(B)(i),
Once a patent applicant aggrieved by the PTO’s PTA decision has exhausted all administrative remedies, an applicant’s “exclusive remedy” to challenge a PTA determination is to file “a civil action ... in the Eastern District of Virginia.” Id. § 154(b)(4)(A).
II.
The pertinent facts may be succinctly stated.
Thereafter, on January 20, 2016, the pro se plaintiff filed a complaint challenging the PTO’s PTA calculation on the following two grounds:
(i) that plaintiff should be awarded 1264 days of B-Delay in addition to the 285 days of B-Delay already awarded to account for time attributable to various delays caused by the PTO during the continued examination of the ’097 patent application at plaintiffs request pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 132(b), and
(ii) that the 599 days of applicant delay discounted from the subtotal of A-, B-, and C-Delay should be reduced by 378 days to account for the time period resulting from plaintiffs filing of a supplemental amendment at the patent examiner’s request.
In addition to plaintiffs complaint, plaintiff filed a “Notice of Constitutional Question” asserting that § 154(b) is unconstitutional because it is (i) “impermissibly vague,” (ii) “overbroad,” and (iii) an “impermissible restriction taking private property for public use with just compensation.” Maass v. Lee, No 1:16-cv-66 (Mar. 28, 2016) (Doc. 9) (Notice).
Thereafter, the PTO filed a motion to dismiss the first of plaintiffs two challenges to the PTA calculation for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R. Civ. -P. The PTO did not move to dismiss plaintiffs second claim. The PTO’s motion for partial dismissal also addresses the constitutional arguments plaintiff raised in his Notice of Constitutional Question.
III.
As the PTO correctly contends, plaintiffs challenge to the PTO’s B-Delay calculation must be dismissed because § 154(b)(1)(B)(i) makes clear that, without exception, the calculation of B-Delay does not include “any time consumed by continued examination of the application requested by the applicant under" [§ ] 132(b).” Accordingly, the Federal Circuit has held that B-Delay “should be calculated by de
In opposition to the conclusion reached here, plaintiff ignores the text of § 154(b)(1)(B), and instead points to § 154(b)(2) in support of his argument that applicants are entitled to receive PTA for time attributable to some continued examination, periods. Yet, as the PTO correctly points out,, plaintiff simply misunderstands the statutory scheme. As already noted, § 154(b)(1) provides that three types of delay result in an award of PTA. See id. § 154(b)(1)(A), (B), (C). Plaintiff is correct that these provisions are “[s]ubject to limitations under [§ 154(b)(2)].” Id. Importantly, however, the limitations set forth in § 154(b)(2) provide grounds for subtracting time from a PTA calculation, not as plaintiff contends, grounds for adding time to a PTA calculation. Specifically, the' statute requires the PTO to calculate PTA by first determining A-, B-, and C-Delay pursuant to § 154(b)(1), and then deducting any periods of overlap and any periods attributable to applicant delay pursuant to § 154(b)(2). Again, this is precisely what the PTO did here. Nothing in § 154(b)(2) alters the calculation of B-Delay, including the express instruction that an applicant is not allowed to recover for “any time .consumed by continued examination.” Id. § 154(b)(1)(B). Moreover, contrary to plaintiffs contention, the PTO need not explain why the time attributable to plaintiffs request for continued examination should be counted as an applicant delay. This is so because the PTO did not classify that time as applicant delay, but instead properly excluded it from the PTA calculation pursuant to § 154(b)(1)(B)® (expressly excluding from B-Delay “any time consumed by continued examination of the application requested by the applicant”). Thus, plaintiffs argument must be rejected because it is premised on a misunderstanding of the applicant delay provision of § 154(b)(2), when the controlling statutory provision for time attributable to any request for continued examination ■ is §'154(b)(1)(B)®.
Plaintiff further contends that § 154®) is unconstitutional because it violates the Fifth Amendment insofar as the statute is impermissibly vague, overboard, and an impermissible taking of private property for public use without just compensation. None of these arguments has merit. To begin with, as the Federal Circuit has explained, the void for vagueness doctrine has no application to § 154(b), as that doctrine “relates to prohibitions, not entitlements,” such as the PTA in issue here. Nyeholt v. Secretary,
Plaintiffs argument that § 154(b) is overbroad fares no better. Although plaintiff does not specify why he believes the statute is overbroad, he appears to contend that § 154(b)(1)(B) is overbroad inasmuch as it excludes from the B-Delay calculation all delays attributable to continued examination at the patent applicant’s request rather than distinguishing between delays during continued examination that are caused by a patent applicant from those caused by the PTO. Put simply, plaintiff contends that § 154(b)(1)(B) is overbroad because that statute casts a wider net than he would prefer. This argument fails because it fundamentally misunderstands the over-breadth doctrine. That doctrine permits parties in the First Amendment context to bring facial challenges to statutes or regulations that govern “a substantial amount of constitutionally protected conduct,” Vill. of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
Plaintiffs argument that the application of § 154(b) amounts to an unconstitutional taking also misses the mark, as the congressional choice not to award B-Delay for time consumed by requests for continued examination is not a taking of property, but rather a decision not to award additional property rights. As the Federal Circuit has made clear, the Takings Clause “contains no requirement that the government give property to individuals.” Georgalis v. PTO,
In sum, the PTO’s motion for partial dismissal must be granted, as there is no statutory or constitutional basis for plaintiffs claim that the PTO erred in its PTA calculation by not awarding plaintiff 1264 additional days of B-Delay for time attributable to various delays caused by the PTO during the continued examination of the ’097 patent application at plaintiffs request.
IV.
In plaintiffs brief in opposition to the PTO’s motion for partial dismissal, plaintiff asserts a new claim that he should be awarded 792 days of PTA due to his pro se status. This new claim is not apparent on the face of the complaint, nor was it presented to the agency below. Thus, the claim is not properly presented here. See Woodford v. Ngo,
V.
The PTO did not move to dismiss plaintiffs second challenge to the PTA calculation, namely that the 599 days of applicant delay discounted from the subtotal of A-, B-, and C-Delay should be reduced by 378 days to account for the time period resulting from plaintiffs filing of a supplemental amendment at the patent examiner’s request. Nevertheless, plaintiff contends that the PTO is in default with respect to this claim because the PTO did not address the claim in the PTO’s motion to dismiss and did not timely file an answer or motion for an extension of time to answer this claim. Not so. As the PTO correctly notes — and numerous courts have held — the filing of a Rule 12, Fed. R. Giv. P,, motion for partial dismissal postpones the deadline for filing an answer to all claims, not just those subject to the motion.
VI.
Accordingly, for the reasons seated here, defendant’s motion for partial dismissal must be granted.
An appropriate Order will issue.
Notes
. The other two categories of delay excluded from the accrual of B-Delay are: (i) "anytime consumed by a proceeding under [§ ] 135(a), • any time consumed by the imposition of an order under [§ ] 181, or any time consumed by appellate review by the [PTO] or a Federal court;” and (ii) "any delay in the processing of the application by the [PTO] requested by
. The facts set forth here are derived from the complaint and are assumed to be true, as is appropriate on a threshold Rule 12, Fed. R. Civ. P., motion to dismiss. See Hishon v. King ck Spalding,
. Plaintiff’s complaint does not identify the title of the '097 patent, but it is appropriate to take judicial notice of the '097 patent's title pursuant to Rule 201, Fed. R. Evid.
. This is not to say that the void for vagueness doctrine has been applied only to statutes that criminalize some range of conduct or speéch; it has also been applied to invalidate statutes that criminalize status. See, e.g., Lanzetta v, New Jersey,
. See also United States v. Salerno,
. See also Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
. See 5B Wright & Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure: Civil § 1346 at 43 (3d ed. 2005); see also Ashby v. McKenna,
. Specifically, Rule 12(a)(4) provides that “unless the court sets a different time, serving a motion under this rule alters these periods as follows”:
(A) "if the court denies the motion or postpones its disposition until trial, the responsive pleading must be served within 14 days after notice of the court’s action”; or
(B) “if the court grants a motion for a more definite statement, the responsive pleading must be served within 14 days after the more definite statement is served.”
Rule 12(a)(4), Fed. R. Civ. P.
