Fordham IP Law Institute 19 th Annual Conference Review of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents Dimitrios T. Drivas 28 April 2011.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
By David W. Hill AIPLA Immediate Past President Partner Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP Overview of the America Invents Act.
Advertisements

© Kolisch Hartwell 2013 All Rights Reserved, Page 1 America Invents Act (AIA) Implementation in 2012 Peter D. Sabido Intellectual Property Attorney Kolisch.
Update on USPTO Activities November 18, 2014 Drew Hirshfeld Deputy Commissioner for Patent Examination Policy 1.
Director’s Meeting Legislation and Case Law Update by Dave Risley July 29, 2011.
Recent Cases on Patentable Subject Matter and Patent Exhaustion Mojdeh Bahar, J.D., M.A. Chief, Cancer Branch Office of Technology Transfer National Institutes.
Greg Gardella Patent Reexamination: Effective Strategy for Litigating Infringement Claims Best Practices for Pursuing and Defending Parallel Proceedings.
American Government and Politics Today
Post-Issuance Proceedings Under the AIA Thomas F. Cotter Briggs and Morgan Professor of Law University of Minnesota Law School.
BIPC.COM STRATEGIC CONSIDERATIONS OF POST ISSUANCE PATENTABILITY REVIEW: THE NEW, OLD, AND NO LONGER Presented By: Todd R. Walters, Esq. B UCHANAN, I NGERSOLL.
Administrative Trials
© COPYRIGHT DICKSTEIN SHAPIRO LLP. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act: Changes to United States Patent Law and Practice Charles.
The Changing Law of Inequitable Conduct Rachel Zimmerman of Merchant & Gould Rebecca Thorson of Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi presented by.
AMERICA INVENTS ACT A Look Into The Future
John B. Pegram Fish & Richardson P.C. New York “Divided” or “Joint” Infringement.
1 Click to edit Master Changes to the U.S. Patent System Steven Steger September 4, 2014.
Patents Copyright © Jeffrey Pittman. Pittman - Cyberlaw & E- Commerce 2 Legal Framework of Patents The U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 8:
USPTO Implementation of the America Invents Act Teresa Stanek Rea Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Deputy Director of the.
Divided Infringement Patent Law News Flash!
CS 5060, Fall 2009 Digital Intellectual Property Law u Class web page at: u No textbook. Online treatise at:
Current Developments in U.S. Patent Law Dimitrios T. Drivas April 24, 2014 Fordham IP Institute: 2C. U.S. Patent Law.
The U.S. Patent System is Changing – A Summary of the New Patent Reform Law.
I NDIRECT AND D IRECT I NFRINGEMENT A FTER A KAMAI 9 th Annual Advanced Patent Litigation Course July 26, 2013 Presented by Casey L. Griffith.
AIA Strategies.
1 1 1 AIPLA Firm Logo American Intellectual Property Law Association PENDING U.S. SUPREME COURT CASES JPAA Meeting Tokyo, Japan Joseph A. Calvaruso Orrick,
John B. Pegram Fish & Richardson P.C. U.S. Federal Court Rule Changes 1 © AIPLA 2015.
America Invents The Patent Reform Act of 2011 March 29, 2011.
Anthony Venturino MILANO 10 February 2012 SELECTED PROVISIONS OF THE LEAHY Smith AMERICA INVENTS ACT OF 2011 AIPPI - AIPLA 1 © AIPLA
“IP Universities” Istanbul, May 16 to 18, 2012 Albert Long Hall, BOGAZICI UNIVERSITY America Invents Act and Its Impact on UniversitiesGokalp.
Prosecution Group Luncheon Patents July, Inequitable Conduct Post-Therasense American Calcar, Inc. v. American Honda Motor Co. (FC 2011) Inventors.
Public Policy Considerations and Patent Eligible Subject Matter Relating to Diagnostic Inventions Disclaimer: Any views expressed here are offered in order.
Patent Cases MM 350 Intellectual Property Law and New Media Steve Baron October 5, 2010.
© 2011 Baker & Hostetler LLP BRAVE NEW WORLD OF PATENTS plus Case Law Updates & IP Trends ASQ Quality Peter J. Gluck, authored by.
Impact of US AIA: What Really Changed? 1 © AIPLA 2015.
1 Patent Law in the Age of IoT The Landscape Has Shifted. Are You Prepared? 1 Jeffrey A. Miller, Esq.
DIVIDED/JOINT INFRINGEMENT AFTER FEDERAL CIRCUIT’S EN BANC DECISION IN AKAMAI/MCKESSON CASES AIPLA Mid-Winter Institute IP Practice in Japan Committee.
Christopher J. Fildes Fildes & Outland, P.C. Derivation Proceedings and Prior User Rights.
Post-Grant & Inter Partes Review Procedures Presented to AIPPI, Italy February 10, 2012 By Joerg-Uwe Szipl Griffin & Szipl, P.C.
Post-Bilski Patent Prosecution IP Osgoode March 13, 2009 Bob Nakano McCarthy Tétrault LLP.
The American Court System Chapter 3. Why Study Law And Court System? Manager Needs Understanding Managers Involved In Court Cases As Party As Witness.
1 1 AIPLA American Intellectual Property Law Association Updates on the USPTO Chris Fildes AIPLA-JPAA Joint Meeting April 9, 2013.
1 Inequitable Conduct in the Prosecution of Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology Patents Stephen D. Harper, Ph.D RatnerPrestia April 1, 2011.
1 1 AIPLA Firm Logo American Intellectual Property Law Association The Presumption of Patent Validity in the U.S. Tom Engellenner AIPLA Presentation to.
Patent Prosecution May PCT- RCE Zombie 371 National Stage PCT Applications –Not Allowed to file an RCE until signed inventor oath/declaration is.
America Invents Act. FITZPATRICK, CELLA, HARPER & SCINTO © 2011 | 2 First-to-File  U.S. will switch to a first-inventor-to-file.
© COPYRIGHT DICKSTEIN SHAPIRO LLP. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Post Grant Proceedings Before the USPTO and Litigation Strategies Under the AIA Panelists:David.
America Invents Act  Date of enactment: 9/16/11  First-to-file provisions effective 18 months after enactment – March 16, 2013  Applications filed on.
INTERESTING AND PENDING DECISIONS FROM THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT JANUARY, 2004 Nanette S. Thomas Senior Intellectual Property Counsel Becton Dickinson and Company.
Patent Cases MM 450 Issues in New Media Theory Steve Baron March 3, 2009.
Mayo v. Prometheus Labs – The Backdrop June 12, 2012 © 2012, all rights reserved.
Derivation Proceedings Gene Quinn Patent Attorney IPWatchdog.com March 27 th, 2012.
Prosecution Group Luncheon Patent October PTO News Backlog of applications continues to decrease –623,000 now, decreasing about 5,000/ month –Expected.
Prosecution Group Luncheon September, America Invents Act Passed House and Senate (HR 1249) Presidential Signature expected Friday Most provisions.
Patent Reform Becomes Law: Overview of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act Presented to the MSBA Computer & Technology Law Section September 13, 2011 By:
Jason Murata Axinn, Veltrop & Harkrider LLP Patent Infringement: Round Up of Recent Cases.
1 1 1 AIPLA Firm Logo American Intellectual Property Law Association THE STATUS OF INDUCEMENT Japan Intellectual Property Association Tokyo Joseph A. Calvaruso.
Prosecution Group Luncheon March, S.23: Patent Reform Act of 2011 Senate passed 95-5 (3/8); no House action as yet First to File Virtual (Internet)
Judicial Branch preAP. Jurisdiction Jurisdiction –the authority to hear certain cases. The United States is a DUAL system: State courts have jurisdiction.
Chapter 16 The Federal Courts. Article III: The Judicial Branch Job under Separation of Powers: Job under Separation of Powers: Interpret the Law Marbury.
The Impact of Patent Reform on Independent Inventors and Start-up Companies Mark Nowotarski (Patent Agent)
HOT TOPICS IN PATENT LITIGATION ABA – IP Section, April 9, 2011 Committee 601 – Trial and Appellate Rules & Procedures Moderator: David Marcus Speakers:
American Government and Politics Today Chapter 15 The Courts.
Recent Developments in Obtaining and Enforcing Intellectual Property Rights in Nanocomposites Michael P. Dilworth February 28, 2012.
Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP AIPLA BIOTECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE WEBINAR Leslie McDonell The contents of.
The Applicability of Patent-Agent Privilege After In re Queen’s University at Kingston Presented by Rachel Perry © 2016 Workman Nydegger.
Inter Partes Review and District Court
Enhanced Damages for Patent Infringement: Halo v. Pulse
America Invents Act: Litigation Related Provisions
MM 350 Intellectual Property Law and New Media
Cooper & Dunham LLP Established 1887
Attorneys’ fees: When will you or your client be on the hook?
Presentation transcript:

Fordham IP Law Institute 19 th Annual Conference Review of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents Dimitrios T. Drivas 28 April 2011

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 2 Trends: 2011  Congress: Patent reform gets closer?  Supreme Court: Continued interest in patent cases  Federal Circuit: En banc review to address significant issues

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 3 Legislative Activity: Patent Reform America Invents Act – Patent Reform Act of 2011  Differs from previous attempts at legislative reform since litigation related provisions are largely absent  Senate passes S.23 (by 95-5 vote) on March 8, 2011  First-to-File system  Narrow Grace period for inventor related disclosures  Derivation action when PTO issues two patents that claim same invention  Post-Grant Review: 9-month window to petition that claim is “more likely than not” unpatentable. No prior user rights  Inter-partes review: threshold is “reasonable likelihood” that petitioner would prevail  Pre-issuance submission of relevant prior art by third parties  PTO has authority to set its own funding  Failure to obtain advice of counsel is not evidence of willful infringement  Prohibits failure to develop best mode as grounds for invalidity

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 4 Legislative Activity: Patent Reform America Invents Act – Patent Reform Act of 2011 (continued…)  House introduces H.R on March 30, 2011, with some differences  Judiciary Committee votes 32-3 in favor of amended bill on April 14  Amended HR 1249 differs from Senate Bill S.23 primarily in details of post-grant opposition system and prior use defense  35 U.S.C. § 273 defense of prior commercial use not limited to method claims  Best mode requirement reinstated (but not available as a defense)  Supplemental Examination – not available where fraud on patent office was committed  Re-exam procedure for business method patents  PTO fee setting authority sunsets in 6 years  False marking litigation 3-year safe harbor after patent expires

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 5 America Invents Act – Grace Period  Narrower than previous proposed patent reform legislation  § 102 “(b) Exceptions  “(1) DISCLOSURES MADE 1 YEAR OR LESS BEFORE THE EFFECTIVE FILING DATE OF THE CLAIMED INVENTION. A disclosure made 1 year or less before the effective filing date of a claimed invention shall not be prior art to the claimed invention under subsection (a)(1) if  “(A) the disclosure was made by the inventor or joint inventor or by another who obtained the subject matter disclosed directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor; or  “(B) the subject matter disclosed had, before such disclosure, been publicly disclosed by the inventor or a joint inventor or another who obtained the subject matter disclosed directly or indirectly from the inventor or a joint inventor.

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 6 Supreme Court: Patentable Subject Matter  Bilski et al. v. Kappos, 130 S.Ct (2010)  Supreme Court (5-4 decision):  Claimed process: method of hedging risks in commodities trading  Court’s precedent provides three exceptions to § 101’s broad principles: “laws of nature, physical phenomenon and abstract ideas  Business methods not per se unpatentable  Machine or transformation not the exclusive test for patentability

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 7 Supreme Court: Invalidity, Burden of Proof  Microsoft Corp. v. i4i Limited Partnership, Supreme Court No (Chief Justice Roberts, recused)  Oral argument April 18, 2011: Question Presented: The Patent Act provides that "[a] patent shall be presumed valid" and that "[t]he burden of establishing invalidity of a patent or any claim thereof shall rest on the party asserting such invalidity." 35 U.S.C. § 282. The Federal Circuit held below that Microsoft was required to prove its defense of invalidity under 35 U.S.C. § l02(b) by "clear and convincing evidence," even though the prior art on which the invalidity defense rests was not considered by the Patent and Trademark Office prior to the issuance of the asserted patent. The question presented is: Whether the court of appeals erred in holding that Microsoft's invalidity defense must be proved by clear and convincing evidence.

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 8 Microsoft Corp. v. i4i Limited Partnership (continued…)  Microsoft appealing $290 million infringement verdict from E.D. Texas, aff’d 589 F.3d 831 (Fed. Cir. Dec. 22, 2009)  Amicus briefs: 20 support Microsoft (including generic pharma); DOJ, BIO, IPO support i4i  Microsoft: 35 U.S.C. § 282 “presumption of validity” does not specify heightened (clear and convincing) standard for proving invalidity, particularly for “new” prior art – merely shifts the burden of proof to challenger; no justification for departing from default preponderance standard  i4i: § 282 codified prior Supreme Court decisions stating that presumption of validity imposed heightened standard; CAFC has consistently applied (and Congress has acquiesced to) heightened standard; burden of proof can be met more easily with “new” evidence; lower standard marginalizes PTO

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 9 Supreme Court: Inducing Infringement  Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S.A., Supreme Court No  Oral Argument: February 23, 2011 Question Presented: Whether the legal standard for the state of mind element of a claim for actively inducing infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) is “deliberate indifference” to a known risk that an infringement may occur, as the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held, or “purposeful, culpable expression and conduct” to encourage an infringement, as this Court taught in MGM Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd., 545 U.S. 913, 937 (2005).

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 10 Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S.A. (continued…)  Federal Circuit (594 F.3d 1360): “deliberate indifference of known risk” that patent exists – actual knowledge not required  Petitioner: 271(b) requires inducing the acts that constitute infringement and knowledge that such acts would infringe patent (purposeful conduct; requires actual knowledge of patent)  Respondent: “willful blindness” to patent as an alternative to actual knowledge – consistent with Federal Circuit standard

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 11 Supreme Court: Bayh-Dole Rights  Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University v. Roche, Supreme Court No  Oral Argument Feb. 28, 2011 Question Presented: Whether a federal contractor university’s statutory right under the Bayh-Dole Act, 35 U.S.C. § § , in inventions arising from federally funded research can be terminated unilaterally by an individual inventor through a separate agreement purporting to assign the inventor’s rights to a third party.  Do university ownership rights in federally funded inventions trump a third party’s contractual rights to the invention, under 35 U.S.C. §§ (Bayh-Dole Act)?  Fed. Cir. (583 F.3d 832):  Bayh-Dole does not automatically void prior contractual transfers of rights  Roche not liable for infringement because it held ownership rights based on assignment (“I will assign” to Stanford vs. “I hereby assign” to Roche)

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 12 Patent Cases – Pet. for Cert. Filed 2011  Eli Lilly and Co. v. Sun Pharm. Industries, Ltd., S. Ct. Case No  Cert. filed Jan. 28, 2011  Question Presented: Whether the Federal Circuit improperly transformed the doctrine of “double patenting,” in conflict with a “vast body of precedent” cited by four dissenting judges, by creating a new bright line rule that invalidates a subsequent patent on a nonobvious, newly discovered use of a basic invention solely because it was disclosed, but not claimed, in the final text of the earlier basic patent.  Applera Corp. v. Enzo Biochem, Inc., S. Ct. Case No  Cert. filed Sept. 23, 2010  Acting Solicitor General invited to file brief on Dec. 13, 2010  Question Presented: Whether the Federal Circuit’s standard for indefiniteness is consistent with the language of § 112.  Caraco Pharm. Labs., Ltd. v. Novo Nordisk, S. Ct. Case No  Cert. filed Dec. 23, 2010  Acting Solicitor General invited to file brief on March 28, 2011  Question Presented: Whether the counterclaim provision in 21 U.S.C § 355(j)(5)(C)(ii)(I) applies where (1) there is an approved method of using the drug that the patent does not claim, and (2) the brand submits patent information to the FDA that misstates the patent’s scope, requiring correction.  Prometheus Labs., Inc. v. Mayo Collaborative Services, 628 F.3d 1347 (Fed. Cir. Dec. 17, 2010)  Cert. petition filed March 2011  Hyatt v. Kappos, 625 F.3d 1320 (Fed. Cir. Nov. 8, 2010)  Cert. petition filed April 2011

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 13 Federal Circuit: Selected En Banc Cases  Hyatt v. Kappos, 625 F.3d 1320 (Fed. Cir. Nov. 8, 2010)  En banc decision: new evidence may be submitted by applicant in district court action pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 145  TiVo Inc. v. EchoStar Corp. et al. (Fed. Cir. April 20, 2011)  En banc decision: standard for contempt of permanent injunction is whether newly accused product is not more than colorably different from prior infringing product  Therasense v. Becton Dickinson & Co., Fed. Cir. No  Standard for determining inequitable conduct (materiality and intent)  Oral argument November 2010; decision pending  Akamai Technologies, Inc. v. Limelight Networks, Inc., Fed. Cir. No  En banc rehearing granted April 20, 2011  Issue: if separate entities each perform separate steps of a method claim, under what circumstances would that claim be directly infringed and to what extent would each of the parties be liable?

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 14 Federal Circuit: Admissibility of New Evidence in § 145 Civil Actions  Hyatt v. Kappos, 625 F.3d 1320 (Fed. Cir. Nov. 8, 2010)  35 U.S.C. § 145: “An applicant dissatisfied with the decision of the [BPAI]…may…have remedy by civil action against the Director in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia”  en banc decision: applicant may introduce new evidence in district court action under § 145 – “no limitation”; reviewed de novo  Hyatt Declaration in district court – identified support in specification for claim limitations previously rejected by PTO and BPAI for lack of written description  Certiorari petition filed April 2011

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 15 Federal Circuit: Contempt Proceedings Post Injunction  TiVo Inc. v. EchoStar Corp. et al., Case No (Fed. Cir. April 20, 2011)  Permanent injunction issued against EchoStar after infringement verdict  EchoStar came out with a modified product  TiVo filed contempt action; district court ruled in favor of TiVo  CAFC en banc provides new guidance:  Lack of intent to violate injunction will not avoid contempt proceeding  Test for contempt proceeding: Whether newly accused product is not more than colorably different from adjudged infringing product – focus on differences between the features previously found to infringe and modified features of new product. If the differences are significant no contempt proceeding  Do the differences raise “a fair ground of doubt as to the wrongfulness of defendant’s conduct?”  Overruled two step inquiry of KSM, 776 F.2d 1522 (1985)

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 16 Federal Circuit: Inequitable Conduct  Therasense v. Becton Dickinson & Co., Fed. Cir. No  Panel decision affirming trial court finding of inequitable conduct, 593 F.3D 1289 (Fed. Cir. 2010) vacated  Failure to disclose statements made to EPO inconsistent with statements made to USPTO  En Banc Oral argument November 2010  En Banc Order raised 10 questions for briefing relating to materiality – intent balancing  (Therasense) “But-for” standard, (i.e., fraudulent act caused the patent grant)  (PTO and Bayer) broader standard – Rule 56(b)(1) prima facie case of unpatentability or refutes or is inconsistent with position taken  Parties agree specific intent to deceive is the standard – gross negligence insufficient (Kingsdown)  34 amici curiae  Awaiting decision

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 17 Federal Circuit: Divided Infringement Defense  No direct infringement of a claim if one or more of the claimed steps or system elements is performed by or used by another party.  Akamai Techs Inc. v. Limelight Nets Inc., Fed. Cir., No , en banc rehearing granted April 20, 2011, vacated 629 F.3d 311 (Fed. Cir. 2010) a strict agency relationship or contractual obligation requiring performance of the missing steps by another party is necessary to find direct infringement.  Centillion Data Sys. LLC v. Qwest Comms., Int’l Inc., 631 F.3d 1279 (Fed. Cir. 2011) a single defendant must use all of the claimed system elements, or compel their use by others through a contractual obligation or agency relationship  McKesson Technologies Inc. v. Epic Systems Corp, Fed. Cir., No April 12, 2011 claim is directly infringed only if one party exercises control over the entire process such that every step is attributable to the controlling party Akamai Rehearing order: If separate entities each perform separate steps of a method claim, under what circumstances would that claim be directly infringed and to what extent would each of the parties be liable?

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 18 Federal Circuit: Patentable Subject Matter post-Bilski  Prometheus Laboratories, Inc. v. Mayo Collaborative Services, 581 F.3d 1336 (Fed. Cir. 2009), vacated, 130 S.Ct (2010), remanded to 628 F.3d 1347 (Fed. Cir. 2010), S. Ct. Case No  Claimed methods comprise administering a drug and determining metabolite levels in a subject in order to assess drug dosage  September 2009 CAFC decision: methods of treatment are transformative (Bilski test) when a drug is administered to ameliorate an undesired condition  Supreme Court remanded to Federal Circuit following Bilski, June 2010  CAFC again reverses district court – method is “transformative” (not just “data- gathering”) – Bilski does not invalidate machine-or-transformation test  Cert. petition filed March 17, 2011 (response due May 20)  Question Presented: Whether 35 U.S.C. § 101 is satisfied by a patent claim that covers observed correlations between blood test results and patient health, so that the claim effectively preempts all uses of the naturally occurring correlations, simply because well known methods used to administer prescription drugs and test blood may involve “transformations” of body chemistry.

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 19 Federal Circuit: Genes / Isolated DNA as Patentable Subject Matter  Association for Molecular Pathology, et al. v. USPTO, et al., Fed. Cir. No (S.D.N.Y., Sweet, DJ. April 5, 2010)  Oral argument April 4, 2011  Judicially created products of nature exception  District court: “isolated DNA” containing gene sequences found in nature, and methods of comparing the sequences, are unpatentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101  Claimed comparisons of DNA sequences to identify specific mutations are abstract mental processes and constitute unpatentable subject matter under § 101 (does not meet the Bilski machine or transformation test)  Panel considers Myriad’s plaintiffs lack of standing argument – lack of justifiable controversy may not reach the merits  DOJ amicus brief – isolated DNA not patent eligible, but DNA molecules engineered by humans are (e.g. cDNAs)

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 20 Federal Circuit: “Reasonable Royalty” Damages Determinations  Uniloc v. Microsoft, Nos , , 2011 WL 9738 (Fed. Cir. Jan. 4, 2011)  35 U.S.C. § 284: “Upon finding for the claimant the court shall award the claimant damages adequate to compensate for the infringement but in no event less than a reasonable royalty ….”  Federal Circuit decision directly addressed the 25% rule of thumb, a rule it had “passively tolerated” in prior cases.  CAFC: 25 Percent Rule is “a fundamentally flawed tool for determining a baseline royalty rate in a hypothetical negotiation.” Abstract theory not tied to particular facts.  Evidence relying on the 25 percent rule of thumb is inadmissible under Daubert and the Federal Rules of Evidence because it “fails to tie a reasonable royalty base to the facts of the case at issue.”

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 21 Other Issues: False Patent Marking – 35 U.S.C. § 292  Forest Group Inc. v. Bon Tool Co., 590 F.3d 1295 (Fed. Cir. Dec. 28, 2009)  § 292 allows penalty of up to $500 for each article falsely marked as patented; permits qui tam actions.  Pequignot v. Solo Cup, (Fed. Cir. June 10, 2010)  21 billion cup lids had patent markings to expired patents.  CAFC: marking with expired patents counts as false marking, but must prove intent to deceive (not just mere knowledge of false statement).  In re BP Lubricants, (Fed. Cir. March 15, 2011)  Heightened pleading requirement of FRCP 9(b) applies to § 292 claims.  Allegations that “sophisticated” company “knew or should have known” patent expired are insufficient.

White & CaseReview of Case Law and Legislative Developments in Patents 22 Worldwide. For Our Clients. White & Case, a New York State registered limited liability partnership, is engaged in the practice of law directly and through entities compliant with regulations regarding the practice of law in the countries and jurisdictions in which we have offices.