(76) Procedures for Restarting Response Periods The purpose of this notice is to announce revised procedures for restarting response periods set in patent related matters. Occasionally, mail from the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) is received late at the correspondence address or the mail is delayed in leaving the PTO. The following revised procedures are effective immediately and will be followed in processing a petition to reset a period for response due to late receipt of a PTO action or due to a postmark date which is later than the mail date printed on a PTO action. The authority to decide such petitions is delegated to the Group Director, where the PTO action involved in the petition was mailed by a patent examining group. Petition to reset a period for response due to late receipt of a PTO action The PTO will grant a petition to restart the previously set period for response to a PTO action to run from the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address when the following criteria are met: (1) the petition is filed within two weeks of the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address; (2) a substantial portion of the set response period had elapsed on the date of receipt (e.g., at least one month of a two or three month response period had elapsed); and (3) the petition includes (a) evidence showing the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address (e.g., a copy of the PTO action having the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address stamped thereon, a copy of the envelope (which contained the PTO action) having the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address stamped thereon, etc.), and (b) a statement (verified if made by other than a registered practitioner) setting forth the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address and explaining how the evidence being presented establishes the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address. There is no statutory requirement that a shortened statutory period of longer than thirty days to respond to a PTO action be reset due to delay in the mail or in the PTO. However, when a substantial portion of the set response period had elapsed on the date of receipt at the correspondence address (e.g., at least one month of a two or three month response period had elapsed), the procedures set forth above for late receipt of a PTO action are available. Where a PTO action was received with less than two months remaining in a shortened statutory period of three months, the period may be restarted from the date of receipt. Where the period remaining is between two and three months, the period will be reset only in extraordinary situations’e.g., complex PTO action suggesting submission of comparative data. Petitions to reset a period for response due to a postmark date later than the mail date printed on a PTO action The PTO will grant a petiton to restart the previously set period for response to a PTO action to run from the postmark date shown on the PTO mailing envelope which contained the PTO action when the following criteria are met: (1) the petition is filed within two weeks of the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address; (2) the response period was for payment of the issue fee1šfu1Ë; or the response period set was one month or thirty days2šfu2Ë; and (3) the petition includes (a) evidence showing the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address (e.g., a copy of the PTO action having the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address stamped thereon, etc.), (b) a copy of the envelope which contained the PTO action showing the postmark date, and (c) a statement (verified if made by other than a registered practitioner) setting forth the date of receipt of the PTO action at the correspondence address and stating that the PTO action was received in the post-marked envelope. The provision of 37 CFR 1.8 and 1.10 apply to the filing of the above-noted petitions with regard to the requirement that the petition be filed within two weeks of the date of receipt of the PTO action. The showings outlined above may not be sufficient if there are circumstances that point to a conclusion that the PTO action may have been delayed after receipt rather than a conclusion that the PTO action was delayed in the mail or in the PTO. February 3, 1994 CHARLES E. VAN HORN Patent Policy and Projects Administrator Office of the Assistant Commissioner for Patents [1] 35 USC 151 permits payment of the issue fee within three months of the date that the Notice of Allowance is mailed to the applicant. [2] 235 USC 133 does not permit a response period to be less than thirty days from the date the PTO action is given or mailed to the applicant. [1160 OG 14]