Insurance
IP Bulletin
An Information Bulletin on
Intellectual Property activities in the insurance
industry
A Publication of -
Tom Bakos Consulting, Inc. and Markets, Patents and Alliances,
LLC |
December 15, 2007
VOL: 2007.6
|
Publisher
Contacts
Introduction
By publishing a little later than our usual schedule we are able to close out
2007 with a complete 2007 issued patents and published applications table in the
Statistics section. The editors were also able to enjoy a year-end holiday with
a little less work and worry.
In this issue’s feature article, Designing Around a
Threatening Patent, Mark Nowotarski discusses how one might
address a new patent which seems to threaten their own business activity.
However, those of our readers who are considering protecting an invention they
have made with a patent may learn something from the article about how to draft
a stronger patent.
In our Patent Q/A we address a question
regarding the current status of the Patent Reform Act of 2007. So far, in
Congress there has been a lot of talk but little action. The bill has passed
the House and is now being considered by the Senate. The House bill has a ban
on "tax patents". The Senate bill has the same language. This ban could
significantly impact insurance patents since many insurance inventions have
positive tax consequences. Early 2008 may show progress on the Patent Reform
Act front. We will keep you posted.
The Statistics section updates the current status of issued US patents and
published patent applications in the insurance class (i.e. 705/4). We also
provide a link to the Insurance IP Supplement with more detailed
information on recently published patent applications and issued patents.
Our mission is to provide our readers with useful information on how
intellectual property in the insurance industry can be and is being protected –
primarily through the use of patents. We will provide a forum in which insurance
IP leaders can share the challenges they have faced and the solutions they have
developed for incorporating patents into their corporate culture.
Please use the FEEDBACK link above to provide us with your comments or
suggestions. Use QUESTIONS for any inquiries. To be added to the Insurance IP
Bulletin e-mail distribution list, click on ADD ME. To be removed from our
distribution list, click on REMOVE ME.
Thanks,
Tom Bakos & Mark Nowotarski
Feature Article
Designing Around a Threatening Patent
(or, How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the SOGRAT
patent)
By:
Mark Nowotarski
An important skill in an intellectual property based business
is the ability to “design around” a threatening patent. A design around is a modification made
to a patented invention so that most, if not all, of the benefits of the
original invention are preserved, but the modification doesn’t infringe the
claims of the issued patent.
The steps to a design around include:
- Read the existing
patent.
- Analyze the claims to
identify steps of each independent claim that can potentially be eliminated or
changed.
- Propose a way to
eliminate or change said steps to create a new, non-infringing invention.
- Verify that the
non-infringing invention does not, in fact, infringe the existing patent.
- File a patent
application on the new invention.
To illustrate how
this process can be applied to a real world example of an insurance patent, we
will show how the steps could be applied to the infamous SOGRAT®
patent, US patent 6,567,790, “Stock Option Grantor Retained Annuity
Trust”. The SOGRAT patent has
recently become notorious in the estate planning profession due largely to the
fact that the owner of the patent, Wealth Transfer Group LLC, sued an
individual, John W. Rowe, former CEO of Aetna, for infringing it. This lawsuit sent shock waves through
the tax planning community since it appeared that patents could be used to block
tax payers from minimizing their taxes and tax planners from giving the best
possible tax savings advice to their clients. As a result, a number of powerful
professional organizations, including the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants and the American Bar Association, have effectively lobbied Congress
and the IRS to either ban patents like this, exempt tax planning professionals
from the liability of infringing them, or heavily regulate their licensing. The SOGRAT patent has been characterized
as a tax
patent (or “tax planning patent”, or “tax strategy patent”). We need to be concerned about it,
however, since it involves a novel use of annuities and life insurance
policies. Hence it can also be
considered an insurance patent.
Step 1: Read the
patent
The specification of the SOGRAT patent
discloses a method for passing stock options on to heirs using an annuity. This method has the potential for being
tax efficient based on the IRS’s current interpretation of gift tax
regulations. The basic idea is that
a donor funds a Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (or GRAT) with a combination of
cash and stock options. The donor
puts enough cash into the trust so that the initial annuity payments can be made
with the cash and the stock options can remain in the trust for as long as
possible. When the cash is used up,
the remaining annuity payments are made with a portion of the stock
options. Hopefully the stock
options will have increased in value so that when the trust matures, there are
stock options remaining which can be passed onto the beneficiary. The beneficiary is a family member of
the donor. If the donor dies prior
to the maturity date of the trust, then the assets are passed on to the
beneficiary at that time.
The annuity payments are selected when the
fund is established so that the cumulative value of said payments is equal to
the calculated value of the stock options at trust inception plus the cash
contribution at trust inception plus the anticipated earnings of the trust based
on an assumed interest rate. The
assumed interest rate is set equal to the federal midterm rate plus ½% at the
time the fund is established. Thus,
from the standpoint of the IRS, the future value of the trust at maturity is
zero. The gift tax of the trust
therefore is also zero. If the
stock options in the SOGRAT appreciate faster than the assumed interest rate,
then the assets of the trust will be positive at the end of the term and these
are passed on to the beneficiary without being assessed a gift tax.
In order to determine the number of stock
options that must be paid to the donor at each annuity payment, the stock
options are valued “as each annuity payment is made”.
Step 2: Analyze the claims to identify
steps of each independent claim that can potentially be eliminated or
changed.
A patent covers only what is in the
claims. In order to infringe a claim the
infringer must (if it is a method claim) perform all of the steps in the
claim. If just one step is left
out, the claim is not infringed. If
none of the claims are infringed then the patent is not infringed.
There are two types of claims in a patent,
independent and dependent.
Independent claims stand on their own. Dependent claims “depend” upon earlier
independent claims. Each dependent
claim refers to at least one independent claim and incorporates all of the
independent claim’s steps into it.
In designing around a patent, you only have
to focus on the independent claims.
If you don’t infringe any of the independent claims, you won’t infringe
any of the dependent claims.
Claim 1 of the SOGRAT patent is an
independent claim. It
reads:
- A
method for minimizing transfer tax liability of a grantor for the transfer of
the value of nonqualified stock options to a family member grantee, the stock
options having a stated exercise price and a stated period of exercise, the
method performed at least in part within a signal processing device and
comprising:
- establishing a
Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT);
- funding said GRAT
with assets comprising stock options, the stock options having a determined
value at the time the transfer is made;
- setting a term for
said GRAT and a schedule and amount of annuity payments to be made from said
GRAT; and
- performing a
valuation of the stock options as each annuity payment is made and
determining the number of stock options to include in the annuity payment.
In order to design around this claim, one
needs to find a way to either eliminate one of these steps or substitute a
different step for one of these steps without unduly sacrificing the benefits of
the invention. The critical skills
are both technical (How can we do this?) and legal (How can we be sure we did
this?).
It is essential to determine exactly what
each word and phrase in a claim means in order to design around it. An inventor may give a word or phrase a
particular meanings in the specification
of the patent. If no meaning is
given in the specification, then courts will give a word or phrase the meaning
that is commonly used among professionals of ordinary skill in the art of the
invention.
Consider step (d) of claim 1:
d.
performing a valuation of the stock options as each annuity
payment is made and determining the number of stock options to include in
the annuity payment. (emphasis added)
What does the phrase “as each annuity
payment is made” mean? It’s not
defined or used in the specification so that means we have to rely on the
definition of those of ordinary skill in the art. An informal poll among members of the
AICPA
indicated that, at least for some accountants specializing in estate tax
planning, “as each annuity payment is made”, means up to two months prior to
said annuity payment being made.
For the sake of this discussion, let’s accept that definition.
Step 3: Propose a way to eliminate or change
said steps to create a new non-infringing invention.
Is there an acceptable or even beneficial
way to manage a SOGRAT that it doesn’t involve performing a valuation of the
stock options “as each annuity payment is made”? We leave that question to the
inventiveness and creativity of our readers. But if someone does invent a way and if
that way does not unduly sacrifice the benefits of a SOGRAT, then a new,
potentially non infringing design around would have been made.
Let’s assume that a new method for managing
a SOGRAT has been invented and doesn’t require step (d). If this new method is practical, and if
the new method stands up to legal scrutiny, then at least claim 1 of the SOGRAT
patent will have been designed around.
This step must then be repeated for all of the other independent claims
of the patent.
Fortunately for this example, all of the
independent claims of the SOGRAT patent have the equivalent of step (d). If the design around for step (d) works
for claim 1, then the design around for step (d) may work for the other
independent claims as well.
Step 4: Verify that the
non-infringing invention does not, in fact, infringe the
patent.
In order to determine if the new invention
doesn’t infringe the existing claims of a given patent, it’s necessary to get a
legal “infringement opinion”. An
experienced patent attorney
is presented with the proposed new invention and a copy of the patent that is
being designed around. The attorney
is then asked, “Does this new invention infringe the patent?” The patent attorney will then study both
the invention and the patent and supply an infringement opinion. If the infringement opinion says
“yes, it does infringe” then it’s back to the drawing board. If the opinion says “no, it doesn’t
infringe”, then it’s clear sailing.
Chances are, however, the infringement opinion will say “it
depends”. The opinion will lay out
certain interpretations of the claims that could “read on” the new invention
(and hence infringe the patent). It
will also give an assessment of the likelihood of a jury in a patent trial
accepting these interpretations and may discuss counter arguments that could be
presented to show that the new invention does not infringe.
It is then up to the appropriate business
manager to make the decision of whether or not the risk of provoking a patent
infringement lawsuit is worth the reward of bringing the new, presumably non
infringing invention to market. For
example, if the design around relied on valuations being done three months
before each annuity payment is made instead of up to two months, then the
likelihood of provoking a patent infringement lawsuit might still be high and
the risk might not be worth the reward.
If, on the other hand, the design around relied on valuations being done
more than a year before each annuity payment is made then the likelihood of
provoking a patent infringement lawsuit could be much lower and the risk might
then be worth the reward.
Step 5: File a patent application
on the new invention.
If the design around is a new invention in
and of itself, then it should be considered for patent protection. It’s quite possible that the design
around has important benefits that the earlier patented invention does not
have. These benefits could lead to
an even larger market for the design around than for the earlier invention. With a patent in hand, the inventor can
protect the new intellectual property he or she has created.
If the design around still might be
considered to infringe the threatening patent, then having a patent on it may
allow both parties to cross license their patents to each other. They then can bring their respective
products to market to the exclusion of other competitors. Thomas Edison did this with his light
bulb patent. Both he and his arch
rival Joseph
Swan were locked in a fierce patent battle over who invented the light
bulb. Edison’s original patent covered a method for making the
light bulb filament. Swan’s
original patent, filed only five months later, covered how to make an air tight
seal around the wires that went into the bulb. Both inventions were important for
making practical light bulbs.
Eventually Edison and Swan settled their dispute by cross-licensing their
respective patents to each other.
They then formed a joint venture to bring their light bulbs to
market. If either one hadn’t
patented his invention, they might not have been able to form the joint
venture.
Conclusion:
The ability to design around a patent is a
critical skill in any industry where patented inventions are made, used or
sold. A design around is performed
by reading the threatening patent, analyzing the claims, finding one or more
steps of each claim that can be eliminated or modified, inventing an alternative
step, getting a legal opinion to make sure that the new alternative does not
infringe, and, optionally, filing a patent application on the new
alternative. Even patents as
seemingly formidable as the SOGRAT patent may be vulnerable to a design
around. Design arounds can lead to
better inventions, the avoidance of future lawsuits and the establishment of
very profitable cross licenses or joint ventures.
Meeting Announcement
A session on new patented or patent pending retirement income products has
been added to the upcoming RIIA meeting, Managing
Retirement Income Conference, to be held at the Doral Resort Golf Resort
and Spa in Miami Florida, February 13 – 18, 2008. Mark Nowotarski will be
hosting a panel of inventors and IP attorneys who will discuss the challenges
and successes they’ve had in bringing new retirement income inventions to
market. Q&A will follow.
The panelists include:
- Chuck Robinson, SVP Investment Products & Services, Northwestern
Mutual Life Insurance Company
- John Bevacqua, Principal Deloitte Consulting
- Matt Schoen, Managing Principal, Private Placement Insurance Products, LLC
- Matthew Reece, Counsel Pepe & Hazard LLP.
Information and Registration can be found at: http://www.iirusa.com/retirement/eventhome/35279.xml
To obtain a "moderator referral" discount, please contact Mark Nowotarski at
(203) 975-7678.
Patent Q & A
Patent Reform Act of 2007
Question:
What’s happening with the Patent Reform Act of 2007?
Disclaimer: The answer below is a discussion of typical practices and is
not to be construed as legal advice of any kind. Readers are encouraged to
consult with qualified counsel to answer their personal legal
questions.
Answer: Well, not much right now but there are some
significant changes proposed and it is worth paying attention to.
Details: Here’s what’s happened. The Patent Reform
Act of 2007 was introduced into the House (H.R. 1908) and the Senate (S.1145) on
April 18, 2007. The House version passed on September 7, 2007. The Senate
version, which was identical when introduced, is awaiting action. The Senate
bill has been reported out of the Senate Judiciary Committee with some changes.
Further action in the Senate is expected in early January, 2008.
Both the House and Senate versions have been amended identically to make "tax
planning inventions" unpatentable subject matter. See the Senate
version of this amendment at: S
2369.
Per the amendment a "tax planning invention" means " a plan, strategy,
technique, scheme, process, or system that is designed to reduce, minimize,
avoid, or defer, or has, when implemented, the effect of reducing, minimizing,
avoiding, or deferring, a taxpayer’s tax liability …" The amendment specifically
excludes tax preparation software or other tools used solely to prepare tax
returns.
Of course, the definition, even though it may seem precise, is broad enough
under some interpretations to include any process involving insurance
since life and annuity insurance products enjoy a tax deferral advantage. It is
expected that some work will need to be done on the language to focus in on only
the SOGRAT type patents (see the feature article) which are, apparently, the
intended target of this amendment.
In addition, the Internal Revenue Service has published
regulations that will add "patented transactions" to the category of
reportable transactions. The definition of a "patented transaction" is "a
transaction for which a taxpayer pays (directly or indirectly) a fee in any
amount to a patent holder or the patent holder’s agent for the legal right to
use a tax planning method that the taxpayer knows or has reason to know is the
subject of the patent." This regulation also specifically excludes patented tax
preparation software. It may, however, be interpreted broadly enough to include
patented insurance design concepts which only incidentally have the
effect of reducing or deferring taxes because they inherit the tax deferral
advantage enjoyed by all life and annuity insurance products.
See the June 15,
2007 issue of the Insurance IP Bulletin for a summary of other patent
reforms in the Patent Reform Act of 2007.
Statistics
An Update on Current Patent Activity
The table below provides the latest statistics in overall class 705 and
subclass 4. The data shows issued patents and published patent applications for
this class and subclass.
Class 705 is defined as: DATA PROCESSING: FINANCIAL, BUSINESS PRACTICE,
MANAGEMENT, OR COST/PRICE DETERMINATION.
Subclass 4 is used to identify claims in class 705 which are related to:
Insurance (e.g., computer implemented system or method for writing insurance
policy, processing insurance claim, etc.).
Issued Patents
A total of 43 patents have been issued in class 705/4 in 2007- only one short
of the 44 issued during 2006.
Patents are categorized based on their claims. Some of these newly issued
patents may have only a slight link to insurance, therefore, based on only one
or a small number of the claims made.
The Resources section provides a link to a detailed list of these newly issued patents.
Published Patent Applications
A total of 183 patent applications were published during 2007 class 705/4 indicating a continued high level of patent activity in the insurance industry.
The Resources section provides a link to a detailed list of these newly published patent applications.
A Continuing reminder -
Patent applications have been published 18 months after their filing date only since March 15, 2001. Therefore, there are many pending applications that are not yet published. A conservative estimate would be that there are, currently, close to 250 new patent applications filed every 18 months in class 705/4.
The published patent applications included in the table above are not reduced when applications are either issued as patents or abandoned. Therefore, the table only gives an indication of the number of patent applications currently pending.
Resources
Recently published U.S. Patents and U.S.
Patent Applications with claims in class
705/4.
The following are links to web sites which contain information helpful to understanding intellectual property.
United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
: Homepage - http://www.uspto.gov
United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
: Patent Application Information Retrieval - http://portal.uspto.gov/external/portal/pair
Free Patents Online
- http://www.freepatentsonline.com/
Provides free patent searching, with pdf downloading, search management functions, collaborative document folders, etc.
US Patent Search
- http://www.us-patent-search.com/
Offers downloads of full pdf and tiff patents and patent applications free
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
- http://www.wipo.org/pct/en
Patent Law and Regulation
- http://www.uspto.gov/web/patents/legis.htm
Here is how to call the USPTO Inventors Assistance Center:
- Dial the USPTO’s main number, 1 (800) 786-9199.
- At the first prompt press 2.
- At the second prompt press 4.
- You will then be connected to an operator.
- Ask to be connected to the Inventors Assistance
Center.
- You will then listen to a prerecorded message before being connected to a person who can help you.
The following links will take you to the authors’ websites
Mark Nowotarski - Patent Agent services
– http://www.marketsandpatents.com/
Tom Bakos, FSA, MAAA - Actuarial services
– http://www.BakosEnterprises.com