duty of candor and good faith

Patents. A patent applicant’s responsibility to disclose to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office all known information relevant to the invention’s patentability, esp. prior art, novelty, and embodiment.

• If an applicant fails to be candid in disclosing all relevant information, the PTO may reject the application. If the patent issues and undisclosed but relevant information is discovered later, the patent may be invalidated, and the applicant charged with fraud on the PTO, even if the undisclosed information might not have barred the patent’s issuance. [Cases: Patents 97. C.J.S. Patents §§ 135–138, 145, 178.]


专业法律词汇 词条贡献者
资深译员Christina,毕业于英国一流的高级翻译学院,擅长翻译涉及教育培训领域的法律文件。
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