Molins PLC (Molins), a corporation organized under the laws of Great Britain, appeals the judgment of the district court,
Molins PLC v. Quigg,
4 USPQ2d 1646 (D.D.C.1987) [Available on WESTLAW,
BACKGROUND
In the examination of a patent application before the PTO, the second official action on the merits normally constitutes final rejection. 3 Patent Practice 11-63 (I. Kayton ed. 1985). However, the PTO has a First Action Final Rejection (FAFR) policy permitting a final rejection in specified situations:
The claims of a new application may be finally rejected in the first Office action in those situations where (1) the new application is a continuing application of, or a substitute for, an earlier application, and (2) all claims of the new application (a) are drawn to the same invention claimed in the earlier application, and (b) would have been properly finally rejected on the grounds or art of record in the next Office action if they had been entered in the earlier application.
Manual Of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP) § 706.07(b) (5th ed., rev. Oct. 1987).
Molins, as assignee, filed a second continuation patent application, Serial No. 648,-262, along with a preliminary amendment. All claims were finally rejected by the PTO in a first office action under the FAFR policy. Molins unsuccessfully petitioned the Commissioner to remove this final rejection contending that the FAFR policy was improper. It argued that a patent application must receive a second examination before final rejection under the provisions of 35 U.S.C. § 132 (1982): “Whenever, on examination, any claim for a patent is rejected [and] the applicant persists in his claim for a patent, with or without amendment, the application shall be reexamined [by the PTO].” After the Commissioner’s denial of the petition, Molins unsuccessfully attempted to file an amendment on July 1, 1985, proposing further changes to the claims. It then simultaneously pursued two courses of action. First, Molins appealed to the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (Board) the merits of the PTO’s final rejection of this second continuation patent application. Second, Molins filed in the district court a petition requesting two writs of manda *1066 mus: the first to compel the Commissioner to rescind the FAFR policy and the second to compel the Commissioner to enter the proposed July 1, 1985 amendment.
On motion of the PTO, the district court stayed its proceeding pending a decision by the Board. The Board’s decision affirmed-in-part and reversed-in-part the examiner’s final rejection, entered a new ground of rejection and stated that Molins could elect to continue prosecution by way of an amendment pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 1.196(b). On Molins’ submission to the PTO and the subsequent entry of its amendment, the Commissioner moved in district court to dismiss the petition as rendered moot. The motion was granted. Molins, 4 USPQ2d at 1650.
JURISDICTION
We have subject matter over this appeal as we did in
Dubost v. United States Patent and Trademark Office, 111
F.2d 1561, 1564-65,
CHOICE OF LAW
In resolving choice of law questions we must consider “the general policy of minimizing confusion and conflicts in the federal judicial system.”
Panduit Corp. v. All States Plastic Mfg. Co.,
JUSTICIABILITY
Molins concedes that its request for entry of the amendment was mooted when the PTO entered the amendment. Nevertheless, it argues that its request for the second writ of mandamus — its facial challenge to the FAFR policy — is still justicia-ble. We disagree, concluding that absent a particularized request, the validity of MPEP § 706.07(b) in view of 35 U.S.C. § 132 is not ripe for judicial review. *
The Supreme Court extensively examined the issue of ripeness and set forth the standard for judicial review in three companion cases:
Abbott Laboratories v. Gardner,
In resolving the fitness prong of the ripeness issue, we must determine if the challenged action raises purely legal questions. If so, it is presumptively fit for judicial review, unless the courts or agency would benefit from postponement of review until the agency’s policy has crystallized or the question arises in a more concrete setting.
See Better Gov't Assoc. v. Department of State,
The Commissioner states that the FAFR practice has been in existence for over sixty years since the decision in
Ex parte Ball,
Hence, assuming,
arguendo,
that Molins’ challenge crosses this threshold, the question becomes whether we, the district court, or the PTO would benefit from postponing review of the FAFR policy until such time as it is presented in the context of a specific application. We conclude that an appraisal of this policy would benefit from review in a more concrete setting because it is inappropriate to review such a longstanding agency practice, absent a specific application of that practice, the first time it has been challenged.
Cf. Horner v. Andrzjewski,
Molins contends that because it frequently files patent applications in this country, the FAFR policy has a continuing impact on the manner in which it conducts its affairs. We do not agree. With regard to hardship, the D.C. Circuit in Webb reviewed a factual scenario similar to that of the present action. Webb involved a medical doctor seeking (1) disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) of data contained in a New Drug Application filed with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and (2) invalidation of an FDA regulation that allegedly violated the FOIA. Id. at 104. The doctor argued that, although the requested information was subsequently released, his facial challenge to the regulation was still justiciable. Id. at 106. Holding that the challenge was not fit for judicial review absent a particularized request, the court considered the resultant hardship. “The only hardship Webb will endure as a result of delaying *1068 consideration of this issue is the burden of having to file another suit. This is hardly the type of hardship which warrants immediate consideration of an issue presented in abstract form.” Id. at 107 (footnote omitted). Molins’ action likewise fails because it suffers from the same deficiencies — it is not fit for judicial review and the only hardship to Molins is the burden of having to file another petition. Molins has not demonstrated that the FAFR policy has an immediate impact on it in conducting its day-to-day affairs.
This case is distinguishable from
Better Government,
CONCLUSION
Although the countervailing judicial or administrative interests in deciding this issue in a more concrete setting are not significant, in the absence of a particularized request, those interests are sufficient when balanced against the hardship to Mo-lins. A case or controversy may be constitutionally ripe for review but that does not automatically invoke review. Prudential considerations must also be satisfied. 13A C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper Federal Practice and Procedure § 3532.1 at 118 (2d ed. 1984). Here they are not. Thus, review must await a more concrete setting. If, in the future, Molins has a continuation application which has been subjected to a FAFR office action and this final rejection has been affirmed by the PTO Board, the issue of the legality of the FAFR policy in view of 35 U.S.C. § 132 will then be ripe for review.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Because we resolve this action on the threshold issue of ripeness, we need not, and do not, reach the issue of whether the facial challenge to the FAFR policy was moot, as so held by the district court. Molins, 4 USPQ2d at 1650. Further, ripeness at the time this action was filed is not at issue and not here decided.
