The trouble with presumed validity – An Example

One of my favorite bogus patents, which highlight the downside of presuming validity in the patenting process, is the “Olson Swinging Patent.”  This patent illustrates the problem of not finding readily referenced prior art in obvious or trivial matters and, therefore, how examiners may have no recourse but issue absurd patents under 35 U.S.C. 282.

Based on the application filed November 17, 2000, examiner Kien T. Nguyen issued US patent 6,368,227 under the title “Method of Swinging on a Swing.”   (The issue date is listed as April 9, 2002, but an exemption should have been made and a date of 4/1/02 used)  Crafted by the inventor’s father, a patent attorney, the invention disclosed is a presumed innovative method of swinging from side-to-side, as opposed to the back-and-forth prior art.

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Fortunately for the myriad children “side-swingers” who would be infringing, the last part of the description states “Licenses are available from the inventor upon request.”  Unable to base a rejection on the grounds of plain common sense, the examiner cites two prior applications as references.  Perhaps the examiner considered citing 8 mm footage of playgrounds from the fifties and sixties, but copyright and rights of publicity concerns kept those references undisclosed.  Should this have been issued on any grounds, other than it does not infringe the laws of gravity?

Fortunately, after the obvious joke was revealed, the USPTO cancelled the claims as stated in the Reexamination Certificate issued under 35 USC 307.

At the time of issue, the New York Times commented on the patent, and it remains a prime example.

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