May 14, 2012

Copycat

Apple tried to get a preliminary injunction against Samsung over design and utility patents, accusing Samsung of infringing its "distinctive design." The district court was unpersuaded, finding, among other faults, that "Apple had failed to show a likelihood of success on the merits." The legal team at Quinn Emmanual, representing Samsung, outmaneuvered MoFo. With the exception of a quibble over legal error for one patent, remanding back for reevaluation, a CAFC panel affirmed, even as it did not often agree with the district court. (CAFC 2012-1105)

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:31 PM | Injunction

May 12, 2012

No Breiner

Sheldon Breiner tried to get a patent on networked data collation from far-flung places. With Obzilla riding shotgun, the examiner combined three far-flung references, supplying motivation to combine as "obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art." Rejection affirmed at the BPAI. Breiner took it to the CAFC, which reminded of the now high bar to overturning the PTO: "this court will not overturn the Board's decision if a reasonable mind might accept the evidence as adequate to support a conclusion." (CAFC 2011-1387).

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:53 PM | Prosecution

May 7, 2012

Lead Compound

In a close-call case, Otsuka v. Sandoz et al (CAFC 2011-1126, 1127, precedential), generic drug makers couldn't invalidate 5,006,528, for lack of identifying a prior art lead compound to derive the patented drug, even under the highly subjective standard of Obzilla. "In keeping with the flexible nature of the obviousness inquiry, the reason or motivation for modifying a lead compound may come from any number of sources and need not necessarily be explicit in the prior art." The ruling also gives a nuanced reading of nonstatutory double patenting. Here too, the subjectivity of "unpredictability" plays a lead role. The contours of obviousness continue to be a case-by-case guessing game.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 9:15 PM | Prior Art

May 4, 2012

Misplaced

It should come as no surprise, for those who are worldly wise, that most patent prosecutors are not adept. Take it as gospel from Patent Hawk, who reads dozens of patents a day. But that doesn't mean you can successfully sue prospecutors for malpractice. Bad for business. Case in point: Minkin v. Gibbons (CAFC 2011-1178), a state patent prosecution malpractice matter that ended up at the CAFC, because the federal courts now take any case concerning patents. Judge O'Malley objects, but she appears in a vast minority.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 6:11 PM | Case Law

April 25, 2012

Zapped

In Zapmedia v. Apple, Zapmedia tried to backpedal from prosecution estoppel (to overcome prior art) in the family of the asserted patent: 7,343,414. Apple's law firm set up solid arugments of claim construction and non-infringment that the courts easily agreed with. (CAFC 2011-1546): See TIP Sys., LLC v. Phillips & Brooks/Gladwin, Inc., 529 F.3d 1364, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2008) ("[P]rosecution history of a related patent application may inform construction of a claim term, when the two applications are directed to the same subject matter and a clear disavowal or disclaimer is made during prosecution of the related application.").

Posted by Patent Hawk at 8:46 PM | Claim Construction

April 23, 2012

Aggrandizement

Landmark Screens v. Morgan, Lewis & Bockius and Thomas D. Kohler tells of a sorry tale of alleged negligence, malpractice and fraud in a patent prosecution. The California state court was biased against Landmark, the company which had its patent filing ruined. Case dismissed. Landmark then sought recourse in federal district court, which tossed the case under pretext of statute of limitations. On appeal, the CAFC decided they had subject matter jurisdiction, even though admittedly "a fraud action, governed by state law, not patent law or patent practice."

Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:49 PM | Case Law

April 19, 2012

Redox

In re Mousa, a chemical compound prosecution, the CAFC affirmed anticipation by inherency. "[W]hen the PTO shows sound basis for believing that the products of the applicant and the prior art are the same, the applicant has the burden of showing that they are not." In re Spada, 911 F.2d 705, 708 (Fed. Cir. 1990) (citations omitted). Applicant failed to prove what could not be proven - that the PTO's unsubstantiated conjecture was wrong. Rejection without direct evidence was copasetic (inherent redox reaction), but "appellant's unsupported statements... are not sufficient evidence to rebut the examiner's contention." In re Hoke, 560 F.2d 436, 438 (C.C.P.A. 1977).

Posted by Patent Hawk at 3:12 PM | Prior Art

April 18, 2012

Drug Abuse

In Caraco v. Novo, a unanimous Supreme Court reversed the CAFC on abuse of patent: "A generic manufacturer may employ the counterclaim provision to force correction of a use code that inaccurately describes the brand's patent as covering a particular method of using a drug. The brand submits misleading patent information to the FDA, delaying or blocking approval of a generic drug that infringes no patent and thus, under the statute,should go to market." The CAFC had found "that Caraco lacked 'a statutory basis to assert a counterclaim.'"

Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:31 PM | Case Law

April 9, 2012

French Fried

5,750,561 owner Aventis sued Hospira and Apotex for infringing the cancer drug concoction. Co-inventor Jean-Louis Fabre withheld references from the PTO during prosecution, and it caught up with him, and Aventis. "There simply is no justification for telling the [PTO] about the prior art disclosing the problem [Fabre] examined while concealing key prior art disclosing the solution he chose." Overcoming the high hurdle of inequitable conduct set in Therasense, '561 had terminal cancer before it was shot in the heart. The claims were also found obvious. Affirmed on appeal (CAFC 2011-1018).

Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:21 PM | Inequitable Conduct

No Access

5,875,435 claims an automated accounting system. '435 owner Noah Systems sued Intuit for infringement. Intuit got the litigation stayed pending reexam. Reexam by "the PTO confirmed the patentability of the original claims of the '435 patent and determined that new claims 19-56 were patentable." With litigation restarted, Intuit sold the district court on the illicit idea that the claimed "access means" were indefinite under §112 ¶2 "because the specification disclosed no algorithm by which the computer was programmed to perform the function asserted in the claims." By law, that failing would be written description, §112 ¶1. But the fix was in, and that was all that mattered. The district court ignored that the claimed "access means" referred to entering a passcode, which was well-documented in a figure and written description, as court documents showed. Affirmed on appeal. (CAFC 2011-1390). One more chip on a mountainous pile showing blatant patent court corruption favoring well-regarded companies over patent holders.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 11:37 AM | § 112

April 3, 2012

Foolish Fiber

In Advanced Fiber Technologies v. J&L Fiber Services, NY Senior Judge Lawrence E. Kahn had some senior moments during claim construction. Further innaity ensued on appeal. The CAFC went along with construing a term that was not in the claims, but in the district court's claim construction. "In those cases in which the correct construction of a claim term necessitates a derivative construction of a non-claim term, a court may perform the derivative construction in order to elucidate the claim's meaning." There was no such necessity, as the non-claim term in dispute inappropriately introduced a claim limitation that was not in the claims. Hal Wegner commented: "the court has once again demonstrated the difficulty if not impossibility of correctly predicting claim construction."

Posted by Patent Hawk at 6:29 PM | Claim Construction

April 2, 2012

Applying Natural Laws

The Supreme Court ruling in Mayo v. Prometheus was not a ruling based in law. To the contrary. By admission of the practicality of the claims, there was scant legal precedent to reach as far as SCOTUS did. The decision was instead a social policy decision - that society was better off not allowing monopolization of heath care treatments. From a legal standpoint, the CAFC got it right in following §101 that one "may obtain a patent," except for what has been prohibited. The Supreme Court expanding the scope of prohibition, that "a patent could not simply recite a law of nature and then add the instruction 'apply the law,'" is exactly what many patents do. All gene patents do that, as do plant patents, for that matter. By SCOTUS reasoning, any biological patent simply applies one or more laws to nature to achieve its effect. Even chemistry patents simply apply the law of nature regarding covalent or ionic bonds.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:13 PM | § 101

March 27, 2012

Not Infused

5,507,412 claims a system to deliver fluids from multiple sources into a patient's body. An adjusting means is claimed to influence the fluid flow from each source. There is a claimed programmable control means coupled with the adjusting means. In the disclosure, the functions of what the control device does are variously mentioned, but how the control device functions is never described. '412 owner Ergo sued CareFusion for infringement. Under the influence of 112 ¶ 2 by way of § 112 ¶ 6, the "district court held that the 'control means' terms are indefinite for failure to disclose corresponding structure." The CAFC affirmed. (CAFC 2011-1229). Should have been euthanized by 112 ¶ 1. The claim was definite enough, but lacked written description.

Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:28 AM | § 112

March 20, 2012

Treatment

Prometheus Labs sued Mayo for infringing drug treatment patents - which simply claim monitoring treatment and adjusting dosage. The district court ruled the patents not eligible subject matter (§101). The CAFC reversed. Now the Supreme Court has once again reversed the CAFC. "The steps in the claimed processes (apart from the natural laws themselves) involve well-understood, routine, conventional activity previously engaged in by researchers in the field."

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:15 AM | § 101

March 18, 2012

No Reexam Revival

Competitors Aspex Eyewear and Marchon Eyewear myopically pummeled each other with patent suits for over a decade. They eventually settled. Aspex navigated a reexam with new and amended claims of a patent subject to the settlement. Aspex nonetheless started a new spat, claiming it had newly loaded dice. Citing res judicata, the courts would have none of it.  "Claims that emerge from reexamination do not create a new cause of action that did not exist before." (CAFC 2011-1147)

Posted by Patent Hawk at 6:08 PM | Case Law

March 14, 2012

Condomization

The courts have the trickiest part of protecting the interests of the State. Laws are designed to protect the government and its minions from liability, while maitaining a facile appearance of equity. Cracks in the pavement of protection that inevitably appear by sloppy legislation need patching by the courts. In Zoltek v. United States, 16 years down a road of judicial hand-wringing confusion, an en banc CAFC sua sponte reverses itself, deciding another decade or so needs to go by to settle the matter. Justice is swift and sure.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:16 PM | Case Law

March 10, 2012

Substantial Evidence

In re PepperBall Technologies, where patents were found obvious during reexam, the CAFC affirmed, as it "upholds the Board's fact findings supported by substantial evidence, 5 U.S.C. § 706." "Whether an invention would have been obvious is a legal question. What a reference teaches and whether a person with ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to combine the teachings of separate references are questions of fact." (CAFC 2011-1137). Under the substantial evidence standard of review, the CAFC must affirm the PTO if there is substantial evidence to support the agency, even if the CAFC would otherwise disagree.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:28 PM | Prior Art

March 8, 2012

Overstated

35 U.S.C. §251 affords "reissue of defective patents," with a caveat as to claim scope. "No reissued patent shall be granted enlarging the scope of the claims of the original patent unless applied for within two years from the grant of the original patent." 5,940,600 claims managing computer data channels. Within 2 years of grant, '600 inventors filed a reissue application, seeking to broaden claim scope. Granted. Outside the 2-year window, two more broadening reissues were sought. The third reissue attempt ran afoul of PTO tolerance, as the broadened claims sought were unrelated to those filed for within the 2-year window. The CAFC appeal was another disgrace for the patent office for its ham-handedness.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 8:26 PM | The Patent Office

March 6, 2012

Graph Off

GraphOn had patents on network database transactions valuable enough for MySpace to get the jump with a DJ action. Craigslist and Fox Network piled in. These upstanding companies had enough credibility with the district court judge to invalidate the patents in summary judgment without so much as a decent claim construction. On appeal, a CAFC panel lamented the slack claim work, but affirmed with nothing more than handwaving dismissal of GraphOn's objections to being railroaded.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:18 PM | Prior Art

March 5, 2012

Mulligan Stew

USPTO honcho David Kappos is showing his chops as a political hack. In announcing 506,000 patent applications in FY 2011, Kappos crowed before Congress: "These figures confirm that innovation is alive and well and will help speed our nation's economic recovery." But only 270,000 new applications were filed. The rest were RCEs, the signature of either bumbling or desperation.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:08 PM | The Patent Office