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The Patent Document I

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Can you reconcile Morse and the American Bell cases? ( p. 172) ... Debating Enablement vs Written Description. The Enzo Biochem Cases. Enzo I (Fed. Cir. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Patent Document I


1
The Patent Document I
  • Class Notes January 21, 2003
  • Law 677 Patent Law Spring 2003
  • Professor Wagner

2
Todays Agenda
  • The Enablement Requirement
  • The Written Description Requirement
  • Debating the Enablement W/D Requirements

3
The Standards for Patentability
  • A valid patent must be . . .
  • Fully and appropriately described ( 112)
  • In compliance with statutory bars ( 102)
  • Novel ( 102)
  • Nonobvious ( 103)
  • The work of the inventors ( 116)
  • Useful ( 101)
  • Within the appropriate subject matter ( 101)

4
The Enablement Requirement
  • 35 U.S.C. 112. - Specification
  • 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. . . .

5
The Enablement Requirement
  • 35 U.S.C. 112. - Specification
  • The specification shall contain a 1 written
    description of the invention, and 2 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 3 best mode contemplated by the
    inventor of carrying out his invention. . . .

6
The Enablement Requirement
  • OReilly v Morse (1854)
  • Claim 8 (p. 164)
  • I do not propose to limit myself . . .
  • The essence of my invention being . . .
  • Consider
  • If the enablement requirement has to do with the
    specification, why the focus on Claim 8? (Is the
    patent valueless with the loss of Claim 8?)
  • What defect in Claim 8 does the majority object
    to? (On what philosophical basis, if any, does
    the objection rest?)
  • How does the dissent respond? (Their theory?)
  • How would you re-write Claim 8 to satisfy the
    majority?

7
The Enablement Requirement
  • The Scope of the Enablement Requirement
  • How might there be said to be two purposes of the
    enablement requirement?
  • Can you reconcile Morse and the American Bell
    cases? (p. 172)
  • By what standard should we evaluate the scope of
    the disclosure? (How does this connect to the
    twin purposes?)

8
The Enablement Requirement
  • In re Glass (CCPA 1974)
  • This rejection is of all claims. What is
    different here from Morse?
  • What was the problem with the specification?
  • Didnt the (slightly) subsequent patents support
    the spec.?
  • What is the date by which disclosure is measured?
  • Is this the right date? (Consider the purposes of
    Enablement.) Pros and cons?
  • Why would the applicant file an app like this?
  • What would have been the easiest way to avoid
    this problem?
  • Note a trap what could the applicant do in
    response to the PTO rejection?

9
The Enablement Requirement
  • The Three Principles of Enablement
  • The scope of disclosure required scope of the
    claims.
  • Can you claim more broadly than you disclose?
    Explain.
  • If some experimentation is required to actually
    make the invention, is the claim enabled?
  • The quantity of disclosure is related to the
    predictability in the art.
  • Can you rely on state of the art for
    enablement?
  • When should you deposit? Are there risks?
  • The measurement of the disclosure is as of the
    filing date.
  • What if you havent yet made your device
    (reduced it to practice) as of the filing date?

10
The Written Description Requirement
  • 35 U.S.C. 112. - Specification
  • The specification shall contain a 1 written
    description of the invention, and 2 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 3 best mode contemplated by the
    inventor of carrying out his invention. . . .
  • How does the Written Description requirement
    differ from enablement? (Statutory clues?)

11
The Written Description Requirement
  • Vas-Cath v Mahurkar (Fed. Cir. 1991) (Rich, J.)
  • M wants priority from a design patent app.
    Why?
  • Because of this, what is the courts real
    question?
  • How does the court resolve the range of
    variation question?
  • Consider the evidence (p. 221)
  • What does the court say is the true purpose of
    w/d requirement?
  • What is the standard?
  • Is this any different than enablement?

12
The Written Description Requirement
  • Gentry Gallery v Berkline (Fed. Cir. 1998)
    (Lourie, J.)
  • Claims recliner sofa, controls anywhere
  • Disclosure recliner sofa, controls on the
    console
  • Can Gentry Gallery be reconciled with Vas Cath?

13
Debating Enablement vs Written Description
  • The Enzo Biochem Cases
  • Enzo I (Fed. Cir., April 2002) (Lourie, J.)
  • Claims to deposited nucleotides insufficient (as
    a matter of law) to satisfy written description.
  • Is this consistent with Vas Cath?
  • How is this significant doctrinally?
  • Consider Why does Enzo deposit rather than
    describe? Why does Enzo claim variations of the
    material as well?
  • Enzo II (Fed. Cir., July 2002) (Lourie, J.)
  • Claims to deposited nucleotides sufficient to
    satisfy written description.
  • Enzo III (Fed. Cir., July 2002) (various) (order
    denying en banc)
  • What do the dissenters say? Do you agree? Will
    the Court change? (Count the votes.)

14
  • Next Class
  • The Patent Document II
  • Best Mode
  • Case Studies Complex Technology
  • Inventorship
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