Prosecution History Estoppel Prof Merges Patent Law – 4.14.08.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
(Week 7) RJM - IP: Sci Ev in Pat Lit - Spring Today's Agenda Student Presentations Helio, then JAPED, then SHARC O2 Micro, review of.
Advertisements

Intellectual Property Boston College Law School February 23, 2009 Patent – Infringement.
1 1 1 AIPLA American Intellectual Property Law Association Standard for Indefiniteness– Nautilus, Inc. v. Biosig Instruments, Inc. Stephen S. Wentsler.
UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE A full transcript of this presentation can be found under the “Notes” Tab. Claim Interpretation: Broadest Reasonable.
1 Rule 132 Declarations and Unexpected Results Richard E. Schafer Administrative Patent Judge Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences.
Greg Gardella Patent Reexamination: Effective Strategy for Litigating Infringement Claims Best Practices for Pursuing and Defending Parallel Proceedings.
1 35 USC 112, 1 st paragraph enablement Enablement Practice in TC 1600 Deborah Reynolds, SPE
35 U.S.C. 112, Sixth Paragraph MPEP 2181 – 2186 Jean Witz Quality Assurance Specialist Technology Center 1600.
Filing Compliant Reexam Requests Andy Kashnikow SPE, Central Reexamination Unit Andy Kashnikow SPE, Central Reexamination Unit June, 2010.
Memorandum - 35 U.S.C. 112, Second and Sixth Paragraphs Robert Clarke Director, Office of Patent Legal Administration United States Patent and Trademark.
Claim Interpretation By: Michael A. Leonard II and Jared T. Olson.
Basics of Patent Law for Scientists, Engineers, and Entrepreneurs
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School March 7, 2008 Patent – Infringement.
“REACH-THROUGH CLAIMS”
John B. Pegram Fish & Richardson P.C. New York “Divided” or “Joint” Infringement.
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School March 5, 2007 Patent – Infringement 2.
Greg H. Gardella Ex Parte and Inter Partes Reexamination Tactics AIPLA 2010 Winter Institute.
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School March 2, 2007 Patent – Infringement.
Claim Interpretation Intro to IP – Prof Merges
STOLL: Original Claims 4, 8 v. Issued Claim 1, cont. 4. A linear motor according to any of claims 1 to 3, wherein the sealing means of the.
Patent Law Patent infringement Lessons from validity –It’s the claim that counts! Comparing claim to [reference] = comparing claim to [accused.
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School February 26, 2009 Patent – Defenses.
Doctrine of Equivalents Intro to IP – Prof Merges
DOE/PHE II Patent Law. United States Patent 4,354,125 Stoll October 12, 1982 Magnetically coupled arrangement for a driving and a driven member.
by Eugene Li Summary of Part 3 – Chapters 8, 9, and 10
Patent Law Claim Drafting. Claim Scope 101 What is the goal? –Maximize “SHELF SPACE” you own How do you get there? –By drafting broadest claim(s)
Intellectual Property Boston College Law School March 5, 2008 Patent – Nonobviousness 2.
Patent reform (from Patently- O) The entirely re-written Section 102 would create a bar to patentability if “the claimed invention was patented, described.
Claim Interpretation Intro to IP – Prof Merges
Claims III Patent Law – Prof Merges Agenda More on claim construction (literal infringement) – Policy issues – Disavowal Doctrine of Equivalents.
Divided Infringement Patent Law News Flash!
Patents 101 April 1, 2002 And now, for something new, useful and not obvious.
Patent Infringement II Intro to IP – Prof Merges
Claims III Patent Law – Prof Merges Issue Preclusion/Collateral Estoppel – Patent Claims Is claim interpretation by District Court A binding.
USPTO & Festo John Whealan Solicitor U.S. Patent & Trademark Office.
By Paul J. Lee. Disclaimer The opinions and views expressed in these materials are not necessarily those of DexCom and reflect only the personal views.
Doctrine of Equivalents Intro to IP – Prof Merges
NUMERICAL LIMITS, ENABLEMENT AND CLAIM SCOPE TROUBLE ABOVE AND BELOW AIPLA 1 AIPLA MID-WINTER INSTITUTE IP PRACTICE IN JAPAN COMMITTEE PRE-MEETING TAMPA,
Determining Obviousness Under 35 U.S.C. § 103 After KSR v. Teleflex
Prosecution Group Luncheon Patents July, Inequitable Conduct Post-Therasense American Calcar, Inc. v. American Honda Motor Co. (FC 2011) Inventors.
California :: Delaware :: Florida :: New Jersey :: New York :: Pennsylvania :: Virginia :: Washington, DC :: Advice for Drafting.
PatentEng-Berkeley-Lavian Week 6: Validity and Infringement 1 Patent Engineering IEOR 190G CET: Center for Entrepreneurship &Technology Week 6 Dr. Tal.
35 U.S.C. 112, Second Paragraph Examination Memorandum Robert Clarke Director, Office of Patent Legal Administration United States Patent and Trademark.
1 Written Description Analysis and Capon v. Eshhar Jeffrey Siew Supervisory Patent Examiner AU 1645 USPTO (571)
Patents VI Infringement & the Doctrine of Equivalents Class 16 Notes Law 507 | Intellectual Property | Spring 2004 Professor Wagner.
Infringement & the Doctrine of Equivalents III Class Notes: March 6, 2003 Law 677 | Patent Law | Spring 2003 Professor Wagner.
Patent Prosecution May PCT- RCE Zombie 371 National Stage PCT Applications –Not Allowed to file an RCE until signed inventor oath/declaration is.
Infringement & the Doctrine of Equivalents II Class Notes: March 4, 2003 Law 677 | Patent Law | Spring 2003 Professor Wagner.
Sci.Ev. - rjm Week 04 1 Seating Assignments Door Screen Warner- Jenkinson Ben, BumQ, Guillaume, Tiffany Graver Tank Aaron, Riti, Ryan KSR Matt T,
Examining Claims for Compliance with 35 U.S.C. 112(a): Part II – Enablement Focus on Electrical/Mechanical and Computer/Software-related Claims August.
UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
Patent Prosecution Luncheon October Patent Document Exchange China now participating in Patent Document Exchange (PDX) program. –Effective October.
Examination Practice in Applications Presenting “Reach-Through Claims” George Elliott Practice Specialist Technology Center 1600
Intellectual Property Patent – Infringement. Infringement 1.Literal Infringement 2.The Doctrine of Equivalents 35 U.S.C. § 271 –“(a) Except as otherwise.
Vandana Mamidanna.  Patent is a sovereign right to exclude others from:  making, using or selling the patented invention in the patented country. 
Exhaustion after Quanta Patent Law – Prof. Merges
Double Patenting Deborah Reynolds SPE Art Unit 1632 Detailee, TC1600 Practice Specialist
10/18/10 RJM - Sci Ev Seminar - Fall Today’s Agenda Warner-Jenkinson 1. tosinDKTS aka Dockets 2. janeJMNJ aka Jumanji 3. joshJMNJ 4. li(ZL) 2 aka.
PTAB Litigation 2016 Part 6 – Patent Owner Response 1.
Nuts and Bolts of Patent Law presented by: Shamita Etienne-Cummings April 5, 2016.
1/30 PRESENTED BY BRAHMABHATT BANSARI K. M. PHARM PART DEPARTMENT OF PHARMACEUTICS AND PHARMACEUTICAL TECHNOLGY L. M. COLLEGE OF PHARMACY.
The Applicability of Patent-Agent Privilege After In re Queen’s University at Kingston Presented by Rachel Perry © 2016 Workman Nydegger.
Patents VI Infringement & the Doctrine of Equivalents
Ram R. Shukla, Ph.D. SPE AU 1632 & 1634 Technology Center
Global Innovation Management Workout on Writing a Patent
Doctrine of Equivalents
Cooper & Dunham LLP Established 1887
Wisdom of the Board Ex parte PTAB Decisions Show Effective Arguments to Overcome an Obviousness Rejection Trent Ostler The content is exclusively the.
PTAB Bar Association Conference—March 2, 2017
Subject Matter Eligibility
Presentation transcript:

Prosecution History Estoppel Prof Merges Patent Law –

U.S. Philips Corp. v. Iwasaki Elec. Co. Ltd. 505 F.3d 1371 (Fed Cir 2007)

Issues Notice -- U.S.C. § 287(a). “[w]here the evidence is such that no reasonable jury could determine two elements to be equivalent, district courts are obliged to grant partial or complete summary judgment”

Issues (cont’d) Claim interpretation

Order of magnitude or range? We therefore affirm the district court's claim construction of the halogen range “between and >mol/mm 3 ” as meaning “between 1 x and 1 x >mol/mm 3.” – p 5

In some scientific contexts, “1” represents a less precise quantity than “1.0,” and “1” may encompass values such as 1.1 that “1.0” may not. – p 6

Infringement “between 1 x and 1 x > mol/mm 3” infringed by lamp with halogen concentration of 1.2 x ? That is (I think): Does range “from to ” cover product with concentration of.00012?

P. 6 Litigation waiver argument We emphasize that the claim construction we affirm today should not be read to state the endpoints of the claimed range with greater precision than the claim language warrants.

Holding: DOE p. 7 “We hold that... resort to the doctrine of equivalents is not foreclosed with respect to the claimed concentration range....”

Vitiation – p. 8 Holding of nononfringement because interpretation “ ‘vitiates' a claim limitation is nothing more than a conclusion that the evidence is such that no reasonable jury could conclude that an element of an accused device is equivalent to an element called for in the claim, or that the theory of equivalence to support the conclusion of infringement otherwise lacks legal sufficiency.” 469 F.3d at

“Vitiation” Defined: “reduce the value of” ; “render ineffective” Latin vitium: reduce, impair, corrupt (thus – vice, vicious)

Examples Moore U.S.A., Inc. v. Standard Register Co., 229 F.3d 1091 (Fed.Cir.2000) “In Moore, no reasonable juror could have concluded that an adhesive strip running only 47.8% of the lengths of the accused product's margins-a minority of the lengths-was equivalent to one running a “majority of the lengths.”

Moore mailing form “first and second longitudinal strips of adhesive disposed in said first and second longitudinal marginal portions, respectively, of said first face, extending the majority of the lengths of said longitudinal marginal portions, and parallel to said first and second longitudinal edges;”

Wleklinski v. Targus, Inc. Slip Copy, 2007 WL C.A.Fed. (Cal.),2007 (unpub) The invention claimed in the ′388 patent is a strap assembly that has both stretchable and non-stretchable strap members.

We agree that there exist more than “insubstantial differences” between the accused products and the claimed invention; this precludes a finding of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents. – slip op at 4

Likewise, a finding of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents would impermissibly vitiate claim limitations. Here, Claim 1 requires separate center and end sections that are made of different materials; finding equivalence with a single strap lacking separate sections and different materials would impermissibly vitiate this limitation. -- Id.

Back to Philips The Holmes reference disclosed lamps with a halogen concentration of 5 x to 5 x >mol/mm 3

[T]he asserted equivalents have halogen concentrations that lie below the range disclosed by the Holmes reference, there has been no showing that the lamps disclosed in Holmes meet all the other limitations of the claim... Holmes therefore does not foreclose the application of the doctrine of equivalents to lamps with halogen concentrations between 1 x and 5 x >mol/mm 3.

Prosecution History Estoppel 1.Recap Doctrine of Equivalents (DOE) 2.Warner-Jenkinson: presumption that part of claim coverage is surrendered when applicant amends claim 3.Festo case 4.Post-Festo developments

“Range of Equivalents” Infringement under DOE ? Literal Claim Scope

Warner-Jenkinson DOE Survives challenge Presumption in cases of claim amendment: amendment made for reasons related to patentability; prosecution history estoppel applies

Original Claim Scope

Narrowed Scope, after amend- ment

United States Patent 4,354,125 Stoll October 12, 1982 Magnetically coupled arrangement for a driving and a driven member The invention is concerned with a magnetically coupled arrangement for a driving and a driven member, which arrangement is operable by a pressure medium and is used in a conveying system. A slidable piston (16) within a tube (10) has an arrangement of annular magnets (20) provided at each end with sealing and sliding members (24, 26). A driven assembly (18) slidable on the outer surface of the tube (10) has an arrangement of annular magnets (32) corresponding to the magnets (20) and provided at each end with a sliding ring (44). The members (24, 26, 44) prevent ingress of foreign bodies to the magnet locations, and consequently enable the spacing between the magnets and the tube (10) to be very small. A good magnetic coupling is achieved resulting in effective transmission of power. Several pistons (16) abutting one another can be used for conveying heavy loads. Inventors: Stoll; Kurt (Lenzhalde 72, D-7300 Esslingen, DE) Appl. No.: Filed: May 28, 1980

Prosecution History Amendments – p. 944 What limitations did they add? Why were they made?

Fed Cir opinion Two aspects –Prosecution history estoppel (PHE) applies to all amendments, whatever the basis –PHE represents a complete bar to all equivalents of amended claim

Federal Circuit opinion 11 – 1 on amendment rationale issue 8-4 on “complete bar” approach

1 st point: “related to patentability” Enablement estoppel is now a reality P. 949 –What would a “truly cosmetic” amendment look like?

2 nd Point: The 3-Part Test Supreme Court rejects “complete bar”

Original Claim Scope

Narrowed Scope, after amend- ment

Original Claim Scope Narrowed Scope, after amend- ment X Embodi- ment “X”: Can DOE cover?

Narrowed Scope, after amend- ment X Embodi- ment “X”: Can DOE cover?

“Estoppel” idea Who is estopped from what? Why? Like other legal instances of estoppel concept?

2 nd Point: The 3-Part Test P 952 [1] Unforeseeable equivalents [2] Amendment bears “tangential relation” to equivalent [3] “Some other reason” -- expectations

The 3-Part Test P 952 [1] Unforeseeable equivalents [2] Amendment bears “tangential relation” to equivalent [3] “Some other reason” -- expectations

Hughes Aircraft Co. v. United States, 717 F.2d. 1351, (Fed. Cir. 1983). Later developed technology to use onboard computers to control satellite orientation is equivalent to receive signals form the satellite and use the computers on earth to control the orientation of the satellite)

Hughes VIII 1998 Because Hughes Aircraft Co. v. United States, 717 F.2d 1351, 219 USPQ 473 (Fed. Cir. 1983) ( Hughes VII ) satisfies the legal requirements announced in Warner-Jenkinson, we affirm.

Literal Infringement Doctrine of Equivalents Patent f “means disposed... for receiving... signals g “said valve being coupled to said last- named means and responsive... Claim Elements ?

Literal Infringement Doctrine of Equivalents Pioneering Inventions Modest Inventions Patent f “means disposed... for receiving... signals g “said valve being coupled to said last- named means and responsive... Claim Elements

Foreseeability Hughes Satellite – still the exception Rare to find accused product not foreseeable at time of amendment

“Foreseeability” Test Pioneer Magnetics, Inc. v. Micro Linear Corp., 330 F.3d 1352 (Fed Cir. 2003), the Federal Circuit, on a motion for reconsideration, affirmed the district court's finding of noninfringement, including noninfringement under the doctrine of equivalents based on prosecution history estoppel.

Claims a power supply circuitry unit that receives various levels of voltage and emits a constant level of output voltage. During prosecution of the '366 patent, the Patent Office rejected pending claims as anticipated under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) by U.S. Patent No. 4,437,146 (the Carpenter reference). The Carpenter reference disclosed a power supply containing a non- switching multiplier, and it did not disclose a power supply having a switching multiplier.

Pioneer argued that the amendment from "multiplier” to "switching analog" multiplier circuit did not pertain to patentability, but was made through sheer inadvertence. The Carpenter reference itself disclosed a non- switching multiplier circuit, demonstrating that such a circuit was foreseeable at the time of the amendment.

The 3-Part Test P 952 [1] Unforeseeable equivalents [2] Amendment bears “tangential relation” to equivalent [3] “Some other reason” -- expectations

Festo remand, 344 F.3d 1359 Fed Cir 2003 (1) factual issues existed as to whether ordinarily skilled artisan at time of amendment would have thought aluminum sleeve was objectively unforeseeable equivalent of magnetizable sleeve; (2) patent holder could not satisfy "tangential" criterion for aluminum sleeve equivalent; (3) patent holder could not satisfy "some other reason" criterion for aluminum sleeve equivalent; (4) factual issues existed as to whether ordinarily skilled artisan at time of amendment would have thought single two-way sealing ring was objectively unforeseeable equivalent of two one-way sealing rings located at each end of piston; (5) patent holder could not satisfy "tangential" criterion for two one-way sealing rings; and (6) patent holder did not establish "some other reason" that patentees could not reasonably have been expected to describe single two-way sealing ring.

Festo, point 1: Glaxo Wellcome,Inc. v. Impax Laboratories, Inc., 356 F.3d 1348, C.A.Fed “The application did not enable any sustained release agents other than HPMC, however, because it only disclosed HPMC's time release and plasma profiles. Indeed the original claims recited those profiles. The examiner expressly stated that only HPMC enabled claims with these profiles. The application did not enable one of skill in the art to make and use a broader genus of sustained release agents. Thus, the examiner's enablement argument, which Glaxo did not rebut, shows that Glaxo surrendered other controlled sustained release agents known to act as equivalents of HPMC.”

Festo on remand: 344 F.3d 1359, (Fed. Cir. 2003) “Festo cannot overcome th[e] presumption [of surrender] by demonstrating that the rationale underlying the narrowing amendments bore no more than a tangential relation to the accused equivalents or by demonstrating that there was "some other reason" such that the patentee could not reasonably have been expected to have described the accused equivalents. However, we remand to the district court to determine whether Festo can rebut the presumption of surrender by establishing that the equivalents in question would have been unforeseeable to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the amendments.”

“Tangential” amendments Insituform Technologies, Inc. v. CAT Contracting, Inc., 385 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2004)

Insituform: the invention This process results in a seamless, jointless "pipe- within-a-pipe" with a smooth, continuous inner surface which usually increases flow capacity. We typically complete installations in a single day, using robotic methods to restore active connections from within the line.

1. A method of impregnating with a curable resin an inner layer of resin absorbent material disposed in an elongate flexible tube having an outer layer formed by an impermeable film, the method comprising the steps of (1) introducing into one end of the elongate tube a mass of the curable resin sufficient to impregnate the entire resin absorbent inner layer of the tube...

(3) drawing through the window a vacuum in the interior of the tube downstream of said one end by disposing over the window a cup connected by a flexible hose to a vacuum source which cup prevents ingress of air into the interior of the tube while the tube is being evacuated, the outer layer of the tube being substantially impermeable to air...

In our view, Insituform has rebutted the Festo presumption. The prosecution history and our discussion of that history... compel the conclusion that the amendment limiting the literal scope of claim 1 to a single cup process bears "only a tangential relation," if that, "to the equivalent in question," a process using multiple cups. The question we must address is "whether the reason for the narrowing amendment was peripheral, or not directly relevant, to the alleged equivalent." Festo III, 344 F.3d at Festo III, 344 F.3d at 1365.

[C]laim 1 in its original form did not limit the number of cups that could be used to create a vacuum, whereas claim 1 in its amended form was limited to the use of one cup.

[T]he narrowing amendment in this case was for the purpose of distinguishing the invention over Everson. Insituform made it clear that the difference between its process and Everson was that its process did not have the disadvantage of the Everson process of a large compressor at the end of the liner. There is no indication in the prosecution history of any relationship between the narrowing amendment and a multiple cup process, which is the alleged equivalent in this case.

“Thus, we hold that plaintiffs have successfully rebutted the Festo presumption by establishing that the amendment... was tangential...”

X Embodi- ment “X”: Can DOE cover? Yes! If (1) amendment made for “tangential reason” or (2) equivalent unforeseeable

Freeman v. Gerber

The claim limitations currently at issue are the aspects of 7(e) and 14(e) which claim ‘‘a thin membrane having attachable means for attaching said thin membrane to an inner surface of said closure’’ and the aspects of 7(f) and 14(f) which claim ‘‘a slit through’’ or a ‘‘disjoined portion within’’ ‘‘a planar section of said thin membrane.’’

Plaintiffs amended claim limitations 7(f) and 14(f) during patent prosecution by adding the words ‘‘a planar section of’’ to clearly define their invention over United States Patent No.4,496,062 to Coy.

During that interview, the examiner requested and received authorization from Mr. Freeman to add the additional language ‘‘a planar section of’’ to these claim elements. Id. The examiner interview summary record describes the general nature of what was agreed to during the interview as: ‘‘Agreed upon Examiner’s Amendment to clearly define over Coy.’’ Id.

In sum, plaintiffs have failed to rebut the presumption that they are estopped from attempting to recapture the surrendered territory of non-planar membranes by virtue of having made a narrowing amendment to distinguish the ’347 patent over Coy.