[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 14, Volume 5, Parts 1200 to end]
[Revised as of January 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 14CFR1274.911]

[Page 463-465]
 
                     TITLE 14--AERONAUTICS AND SPACE
 
                          SPACE ADMINISTRATION
 
PART 1274--COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS WITH COMMERCIAL FIRMS--Table of Contents
 
              Subpart I--Provisions and Special Conditions
 
Sec. 1274.911  Patent rights.

                        Patent Rights (July 2000)

    (a) Definitions.
    (1) ``Administrator'' means the Administrator or Deputy 
Administrator of NASA.

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    (2) ``Invention'' means any invention or discovery which is or may 
be patentable or otherwise protectable under Title 35 of the United 
States Code.
    (3) ``Made'' when used in relation to any invention means the 
conception or first actual reduction to practice such invention.
    (4) ``Nonprofit organization'' means a domestic university or other 
institution of higher education or an organization of the type described 
in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (26 U.S.C. 
501(c)) and exempt from taxation under Section 501(a) of the Internal 
Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 501(a)), or any domestic nonprofit scientific or 
educational organization qualified under a State nonprofit organization 
statute.
    (5) ``Practical application'' means to manufacture, in the case of a 
composition or product; to practice, in the case of a process or method; 
or to operate, in the case of a machine or system; and, in each case, 
under such conditions as to establish that the invention is being 
utilized and that its benefits are, to the extent permitted by law or 
Government regulations, available to the public on reasonable terms.
    (6) ``Recipient'' means:
    (i) The signatory Recipient party or parties or;
    (ii) The Consortium, where a Consortium has been formed for carrying 
out Recipient responsibilities under this agreement.
    (7) ``Small Business Firm'' means a domestic small business concern 
as defined at 15 U.S.C. 632 and implementing regulations (see 13 CFR 
121.401 et seq.) of the Administrator of the Small Business 
Administration.
    (8) ``Subject Invention'' means any invention of a Recipient and/or 
Government employee conceived or first actually reduced to practice in 
the performance of work under this Agreement.
    (b) Allocation of Principal Rights.
    (1) Recipient Inventions. For other than Small Business Firm or 
Nonprofit organization Recipients, the ``PATENT RIGHTS--RETENTION BY 
RECIPIENT (LARGE BUSINESS)'' provision applies. For Small Business Firm 
and Nonprofit organization Recipients, the ``PATENT RIGHTS--RETENTION BY 
RECIPIENT (SMALL BUSINESS)'' provision applies.
    (2) NASA Inventions. NASA will use reasonable efforts to report 
inventions made by NASA employees as a consequence of, or which bear a 
direct relation to, the performance of specified NASA activities under 
this cooperative agreement and, upon timely request, NASA will use its 
best efforts to grant the Recipient or designated Consortium Member (if 
applicable) the first option to acquire either an exclusive or partially 
exclusive, revocable, royalty-bearing license, on terms to be 
subsequently negotiated, for any patent applications and patents 
covering such inventions, and subject to the license reserved in 
paragraph (b)(5)(i) of this section. Upon application in compliance with 
37 CFR part 404--Licensing of Government Owned Inventions, the Recipient 
or each Consortium Member (if applicable), shall be granted a revocable, 
nonexclusive, royalty-free license in each patent application filed in 
any country on a subject invention and any resulting patent in which the 
Government acquires title. Each nonexclusive license may extend to 
subsidiaries and affiliates, if any, within the corporate structure of 
the licensee and includes the right to grant sublicenses of the same 
scope to the extent the licensee was legally obligated to do so at the 
time the cooperative agreement was signed.
    (3) NASA Contractor Inventions. In the event NASA contractors are 
tasked to perform work in support of specified NASA activities under 
this cooperative agreement and inventions are made by contractor 
employees, the Recipient will normally retain title to its employee 
inventions in accordance with 35 U.S.C. 202, 14 CFR part 1245, and 
Executive Order 12591. In the event the Recipient decides not to pursue 
right to title in any such invention and NASA obtains title to such 
inventions, NASA will use reasonable efforts to report such inventions 
and, upon timely request, NASA will use its best efforts to grant the 
Recipient or designated Consortium Member (if applicable) the first 
option to acquire either an exclusive or partially exclusive, revocable, 
royalty-bearing license, upon terms to be subsequently negotiated, for 
any patent applications and patents covering such inventions, and 
subject to the license reserved in paragraph (b)(5)(ii) of this section. 
Upon application in compliance with 37 CFR part 404 -- Licensing of 
Government Owned Inventions, the Recipient or each Consortium Member (if 
applicable), shall be granted a revocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free 
license in each patent application filed in any country on a subject 
invention and any resulting patent in which the Government acquires 
title. Each nonexclusive license may extend to subsidiaries and 
affiliates, if any, within the corporate structure of the licensee and 
includes the right to grant sublicenses of the same scope to the extent 
the licensee was legally obligated to do so at the time the cooperative 
agreement was signed.
    (4) Joint NASA and Recipient Inventions. NASA and Recipient agree to 
use reasonable efforts to identify and report to each other any 
inventions made jointly between NASA employees (or employees of NASA 
Contractors) and employees of Recipient.
    (i) For other than small business firms and nonprofit organizations 
the Administrator may agree that the United States will refrain from 
exercising its undivided interest in a manner inconsistent with 
Recipient's commercial interest and to cooperate with Recipient in 
obtaining patent protection on

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its undivided interest on any waived inventions subject, however, to the 
condition that Recipient makes its best efforts to bring the invention 
to the point of practical application at the earliest practicable time. 
In the event that the Administrator determines that such efforts are not 
undertaken, the Administrator may void NASA's agreement to refrain from 
exercising its undivided interest and grant licenses for the practice of 
the invention so as to further its development. In the event that the 
Administrator decides to void NASA's agreement to refrain from 
exercising its undivided interest and grant licenses for this reason, 
notice shall be given to the Inventions and Contributions Board as to 
why such action should not be taken. Either alternative will be subject 
to the applicable license or licenses reserved in paragraph (b)(5) of 
this section.
    (ii) For small business firms and nonprofit organization, NASA may 
assign or transfer whatever rights it may acquire in a subject invention 
from its employee to the Recipient as authorized by 35 U.S.C. 202(e).
    (5) Minimum rights reserved by the Government. Any license or 
assignment granted Recipient pursuant to paragraphs (b)(2), (3), or (4) 
of this section will be subject to the reservation of the following 
licenses:
    (i) As to inventions made solely or jointly by NASA employees, the 
irrevocable, royalty-free right of the Government of the United States 
to practice and have practiced the invention by or on behalf of the 
United States; and
    (ii) As to inventions made solely by, or jointly with, employees of 
NASA Contractors, the rights in the Government of the United States as 
set forth in paragraph (b)(5)(i) of this section, as well as the 
revocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free license in the contractor as set 
forth in 14 CFR 1245.108.
    (6) Preference for United States manufacture. The Recipient agrees 
that any products embodying subject inventions or produced through the 
use of subject inventions shall be manufactured substantially in the 
United States. However, in individual cases, the requirement to 
manufacture substantially in the United States may be waived by the 
Associate Administrator for Procurement (Code HS) with the concurrence 
of the Associate General Counsel for Intellectual Property upon a 
showing by the Recipient that under the circumstances domestic 
manufacture is not commercially feasible.
    (7) Work performed by the Recipient under this cooperative agreement 
is considered undertaken to carry out a public purpose of support and/or 
stimulation rather than for acquiring property or services for the 
direct benefit or use of the Government. Accordingly, such work by the 
Recipient is not considered ``by or for the United States'' and the 
Government assumes no liability for infringement by the Recipient under 
28 U.S.C. 1498.

[End of provision]