Patent law protects inventions, sucn as machines, devices, molecular structures, and manufacturing processes. We recommend that you begin your patent research with secondary sources, such as legal encyclopedias, treatises, and law review articles.
Statutory law: The Patent Act, Title 35 of the United States Code, was enacted in accordance with article I, section 8, clause 8 of the U.S. Constitution. The official version of Title 35 is on the U.S. Government Publishing Office Website. Lexis and Westlaw maintain updated, annotated versions of the code with features for accessing related primary law, legislative history, secondary sources, and more.
Proposed Legislation:
Regulations: Patent regulations are codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 37, Part I. This version of the regulations from the Cornell LII website, is user-friendly, but not the official version. Access the official version on the U.S. Government Publishing Office website. Lexis or Westlaw maintain up-to-date, annotated versions of the CFR with features for linking to relevant regulatory history, code sections, case law, administrative law, and more.
Case Law: The best way to find relevant case law is to start with a secondary source. Alternatively, if you have a citation to a statute, use the annotations or Shepardize (Lexis) or KeyCite (Westlaw) the statute to find relevant cases.
Patent Searches: