Title: Enablement and written description
1Enablement and written description
2 1 Written Description of Claimed Invention
Disclosure/Enablement, 112
1 Enablement of one skilled in the art without
undue experimentation of
how to make
how to use
1 Best Mode contemplated by inventor
2,6 Claims - definiteness
3U.S.C. 112 1
Disclosure/Enablement, 112
The specification shall contain a written
description of the invention, and of the manner
and process of making and using it, in such full,
clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any
person skilled in the art to which it pertains,
or with which it is most nearly connected, to
make and use the same, and shall set forth the
best mode contemplated by the inventor of
carrying out his invention.
4U.S.C. 112 2
The specification shall conclude with one or more
claims particularly pointing out and distinctly
claiming the subject matter which the applicant
regards as his invention.
5U.S.C. 112 3
A claim may be written in independent or, if the
nature of the case admits, in dependent or
multiple dependent form.
6U.S.C. 112 4
Subject to the following paragraph, a claim in
dependent form shall contain a reference to a
claim previously set forth and then specify a
further limitation of the subject matter claimed.
A claim in dependent form shall be construed to
incorporate by reference all the limitations of
the claim to which it refers.
7U.S.C. 112 5
A claim in multiple dependent form shall contain
a reference, in the alternative only, to more
than one claim previously set forth and then
specify a further limitation of the subject
matter claimed. A multiple dependent claim shall
not serve as a basis for any other multiple
dependent claim. A multiple claim shall be
construed to incorporate by reference all the
limitations of the particular claim in relation
to which it is being considered.
8U.S.C. 112 6
An element in a claim for a combination may be
expressed as a means or step for performing a
specified function without the recital of
structure, material, or acts in support thereof,
and such claim shall be construed to cover the
corresponding structure, material, or acts
described in the specification and equivalents
thereof.
9(No Transcript)
10CLAIM 1 ELEMENTS
Rotating handle at end of bar
U-shaped bar
Cutting element attached to bar
Base, with passageway
11Enablement/Written Description
Cheese Slicer Specifications, X
The handle may be turned to ... draw the cutting
element taut so that it may properly perform its
cutting function.
Claim Elements
Rotating handle at end of bar
Rotating handle at end of bar
Cutting element attached to bar
Base, with passageway
U-shaped bar
12The Incandescent Lamp Patent
Incandescing conductor
Bamboo discovered as an incandescing conductor.
13Claims page 262
- 1. An incandescing conductor for an electric
lamp, of carbonized fibrous or textile material
and of an arch or horseshoe shape, substantially
as hereinbefore set forth.
14System claims
- 2. The combination, substantially as hereinbefore
set forth, of an electric circuit and an
incandescing conductor of carbonized fibrous
material, included in and forming part of said
circuit, and a transparent hermetically sealed
chamber in which the conductor is enclosed.
15Narrow picture claim p. 263
- 3. The incandescing conductor for an electric
lamp, formed of carbonized paper, substantially
as described.
16Sawyer and Man Commercial product
- Is this relevant to question of infringement in
this case?
17Edison Patent
- Is this relevant to this case?
- Is it a defense for McKeesport Light that it has
a license from Edison?
18Overlapping and Blocking Patents
- Quite possible for defendant to have patents that
plaintiff infringes - Irrelevant to plaintiffs cause of action
19What is defendants defense?
- Is the complainant entitled to a monopoly of all
fibrous and textile materials for incandescent
conductors?
20- If the patentees had discovered in fibrous and
textile substances a quality common to them all,
or to them generally, as distinguishing them from
other materials, such as minerals, etc., and such
quality or characteristic adapted them peculiarly
to incandescent conductors, such claim might not
be too broad.
21- Instead of confining themselves to carbonized
paper, as they might properly have done, and in
fact did in their third claim, they made a broad
claim for every fibrous or textile material, when
in fact an examination of over six thousand
vegetable growths showed that none of them
possessed the peculiar qualities that fitted them
for that purpose. -- page 266
22Policy rationale
- Was everybody then precluded by this broad claim
from making further investigation? We think not.
23Edisons experiments relevance?
- How does this evidence bear on the question of
the proper scope of Sawyer and Mans patent?
24Page 268
- How would it be possible for a person to know
what fibrous or textile material was adapted to
the purpose of an incandescent conductor, except
by the most careful and painstaking
experimentation?
25- If as before observed, there were some general
quality, running through the whole fibrous and
textile kingdom, which distinguished it from
every other, and gave it a peculiar fitness for
the particular purpose, the man who discovered
such quality might justly be entitled to a
patent but that is not the case here.
26Sawyer and Mann Patent
Claimed All Fibrous and textile material
(6,000 plus embodiments)
Enabled Carbonized paper, plus?
27Updating Incandescent Lamp
- Federal Circuit
- Enablement is an issue of fact
- Standard has not changed
- Patents are required to "teach those skilled in
the art how to make and use the full scope of the
claimed invention without 'undue
experimentation.' " Genentech Inc. v. Novo
Nordisk A/S, 108 F.3d 1361, 1365 (Fed.Cir.1997).
28Updating, continued . . .
- Automotive Technologies Intern., Inc. v. BMW of
North America, Inc.,501 F.3d 1274 (Fed Cir 2007)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Claim
- 1. A side impact crash sensor for a vehicle
having front and rear wheels, said sensor
comprising - (a) a housing
- (b) a mass within said housing movable relative
to said housing in response to accelerations of
said housing - (c) means responsive to the motion of said mass
upon acceleration of said housing in excess of a
predetermined threshold value, for initiating an
occupant protection apparatus and
33- (d) means for mounting said housing onto at least
one of a side door of the vehicle and a side of
the vehicle between the centers of the front and
rear wheels, in such a position and a direction
as to sense an impact into the side of said
vehicle.
34(No Transcript)
35- Figure 11 is a conceptional view of an
electronic sensor assembly 201 built according to
the teachings of this invention. This sensor
contains a sensing mass 202 which moves relative
to housing 203 in response to the acceleration of
housing 203 which accompanies a side impact
crash. The specification further states that the
motion of the sensing mass can be sensed by a
variety of technologies using, for example,
optics, resistance change, capacitance change or
magnetic reluctance change. The enablement of
this electronic side impact sensor is at issue in
this appeal.
36- According to Delphi, providing an enabling
disclosure of only mechanical side impact sensors
is insufficient to satisfy the enablement
requirement because the full scope of the claims
is not enabled. Delphi further responds that the
short recitation of an electronic sensor in the
specification does not in fact enable an
electronic side impact sensor because it does not
teach one skilled in the art how to make and use
such a sensor without undue experimentation.
501 F.3d at 1281
37- Only one short paragraph and one figure relate
to an electronic sensor. Importantly, that
paragraph and figure do little more than provide
an overview of an electronic sensor without
providing any details of how the electronic
sensor operates. Figure 11 shows a very general
view of an electronic side impact sensor.
38(No Transcript)
39The Written Description Requirement
Scope of enablement vs. scope of that which you
have described
Gentry Gallery, Inc. v. Berkline Corp., 134 F.3d
1473 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
Gentry was granted a patent for a sectional sofa
comprised of a pair of reclining seats that faced
the same direction. Claim 1, the broadest claim,
identifies a fixed console between the pair of
seats. Claims 9, 10, 12-15, and 19-21 are
directed to a sectional sofa in which the control
means are specifically located on the console.
The term console does not cover a sofa section
having a seat back that folds down to serve as a
table top. (This was to distinguish Gentrys
sofa from prior art.) The Federal Circuit
limits the scope of the claim to cover sofas in
which the recliner control is located on the
console and invalidates 12 claims in the patent
under 112. The court affirmed that Berkline
had not infringed on Gentrys patent by
constructing reclining chairs separated by a
center seat whose back cushion pivoted to form a
table.
Original Claim Language
Prosecution History
Amended Claim Language
40Gentry Gallery, contd
Canon 1 Claims should be interpreted such that
the preferred embodiment falls within their scope.
Gentry Gallery, Inc. v. Berkline Corp., 134 F.3d
1473 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
Gentry was granted a patent for a sectional sofa
comprised of a pair of reclining seats that faced
the same direction. Claim 1, the broadest claim,
identifies a fixed console between the pair of
seats. Claims 9, 10, 12-15, and 19-21 are
directed to a sectional sofa in which the control
means are specifically located on the console.
The term console does not cover a sofa section
having a seat back that folds down to serve as a
table top. (This was to distinguish Gentrys
sofa from prior art.) The Federal Circuit
limits the scope of the claim to cover sofas in
which the recliner control is located on the
console and invalidates 12 claims in the patent
under 112. The court affirmed that Berkline
had not infringed on Gentrys patent by
constructing reclining chairs separated by a
center seat whose back cushion pivoted to form a
table.
Original Claim Language
Prosecution History
Amended Claim Language
41Patent Specification
Enabled subject matter everything the inventor
teaches to one of skill in the art.
Enabled
Described embodiments of the invention
everything the inventor adequately describes to
one in the art everything the inventor shows she
is in possession of or contemplates as embraced
by her invention
Specification
Described
Claim 1 Original Application
Claim 2
Claimed in C-I-P or amended application
42Specification Re-filed
If the inventor re-files the specification at a
later date, she cannot claim what the first
filing enabled but failed to describe.
Enabled
Described
Claim 1 Original Application
43Whats claimable?
Dedicated to the Public
Competitor
Original Description
Competitor
Taught by Patent
Competitor
Claimable by original inventor
44Gentry Gallery v. Berkline Corp.
Enabled 2 reclining seats in a sectional sofa
controls not located on arms of chair
Enabled
Specification for Gentry patent
Described pair of reclining seats in a
sectional sofa with a fixed console that houses
the control means
Described
Claim 1
Claimed pair of reclining seats in a sectional
sofa, a fixed console, and a pair of controls.
45(No Transcript)
46Power Oasis, Inc. v. T-Mobile, Inc.
- 522 F.3d 1299 (Fed Cir 2008)
- Original and amended claims to vending machine
purchase of mobile phone access minutes for
laptops - Held Amended Claims fail to meet Written
Description Requirement
47Written Description and Claim Amendments
- The '658 and '400 patents list filing dates of
November 6, 2001 and October 15, 2002,
respectively. The '658 and '400 patents stem from
a series of continuation and continuation-in-part
applications. The first application in the patent
chain (Original Application) was filed on
February 6, 1997 and ultimately issued as U.S.
Patent No. 5,812,643 ('643 patent). PowerOasis
does not assert the '643 patent in this
litigation.
48(No Transcript)
49- PowerOasis sued T-Mobile for patent infringement
alleging that T-Mobile's wireless HotSpot
Network FN1 infringes claims 15, 18, 31, 35, 38,
40, and 49 of both PowerOasis patents.
50PowerOasis Claim
- 1. A vending machine for vending
telecommunications channel access to a customer,
said vending machine comprising - a payment mechanism for obtaining information
from the customer to initiate a vending
transaction - a customer interface for indicating the status of
said vending machine - an electronic circuit for determining when the
vending transaction is completed
51- a telecommunications channel access circuit
adapted to be connected to at least one external
telecommunications channel for enabling access .
. . - a telecommunications channel access connector
connected to said telecommunications channel
access circuit for enabling connection to an
external telecommunications device of the
customer and - a control unit having a device for receiving
payment information from the customer and for
controlling said electronic circuit and said
telecommunications channel access circuit.
52- Written description not met -- amendments