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Recent Developments in Patent Law

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Title: Recent Developments in Patent Law


1
Recent Developments in Patent Law
  • Supreme Court
  • and
  • Federal Circuit Cases

Russell J. Genet Nixon Peabody, Chicago
2
  • MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.
  • 127 S. Ct. 764 (January 9, 2007)

3
Supreme Court Opinion
  • Question Does D.J. Act require a licensee to
    terminate or breach license agreement before
    seeking declaratory judgment of
    invalidity, unenforceability, or
    non-infringement?
  • Answer No.

4
Supreme Court Opinion
  • Court has jurisdiction over a declaratory
    judgment suit brought by a licensee in good
    standing, where the licensee
  • Paid royalties
  • Under protest
  • With a reservation of its rights after the patent
    holder demanded royalties for a product it
    believed was covered under the terms of the
    license.

5
Supreme Court Opinion
  • Basically the question in each case is whether
    the facts alleged, under all the circumstances,
    show that there is a substantial controversy,
    between parties having adverse legal interests,
    of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant
    the issuance of a declaratory judgment.
  • Medlmmune, 127 S.Ct. at 771.

6
Supreme Court Opinion
  • The requirements of a case or controversy are
    met where payment of a claim is demanded as a
    right and where payment is made, but where the
    involuntary or coercive nature of the exaction
    preserves the right to recover the sums paid or
    to challenge the legality of the claim. Citing
    Altvater v. Freeman, 218 U.S. 259 (1943)
  • Medlmmune, 127 S.Ct. at 773.

7
Supreme Court Opinion
  • Reasonable apprehension of suit test used by
    the Federal Circuit to determine if an actual
    case or controversy exists when a party seeks a
    declaration of invalidity or non-infringement
    contradicts the Supreme Courts decisions on
    jurisdiction.
  • Medlmmune, 127 S.Ct. at 774 n.11.

8
Post-MedImmune DecisionsActual Case or
Controversy Exists
  • SanDisk Corp. v. STMicroelectronics, Inc., 480
    F.3d 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2007).
  • SanDisk need not bet the farm, so to speak,
    and risk a suit for infringement by cutting off
    licensing discussions and continuing in the
    identified activity before seeking a declaration
    of its legal rights.
  • We hold . . . that where . . . a patentee
    asserts rights under a patent based on certain
    identified ongoing or planned activity at another
    party and where that party contends that it has
    the right to engage in the accused activity
    without license, an Article III case or
    controversy will arise . . .

9
Post-MedImmune DecisionsActual Case or
Controversy Exists
  • Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. v. Novartis
    Pharmaceuitcals, Corp., 482 F.3d 1330 (Fed. Cir.
    2007) (using all the circumstances test).
  • Crutchfield New Media LLC v. Hill Associates,
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33264 (S.D. Ind. May 4,
    2007)
  • Finding that letter from patent holder regarding
    patents, licenses, and prior suits brought by
    patent holder on patents in suit to be sufficient
    under all the circumstances test.

10
Impact of MedImmune
  • Licensing negotiations may lead to DJ actions
    more easily.
  • License agreement provisions
  • agree to validity and infringement
  • agree not to challenge validity
  • agree not to challenge validity/infringement
    unless discontinue royalty payments

11
  • KSR International Co. v. Teleflex Inc.
  • 127 S. Ct. 1727 (April 30, 2007)

12
KSR The Supreme Opinions
  • The combination of familiar elements according
    to known methods is likely to be obvious when it
    does no more than yield predictable results.
  • Predictable results ? Obvious
  • A court must ask whether the improvement is
    more than the predictable use of prior art
    elements according to their established
    functions.
  • Old elements, same functions ? Obvious

13
KSR The Supreme Opinions (contd)
  • Common sense teaches, however, that familiar
    items may have obvious uses beyond their primary
    purposes, and in many cases a person of ordinary
    skill will be able to fit the teachings of
    multiple patents together like pieces of a
    puzzle.
  • Common sense in applying broad range of prior
    art ? Obvious

14
KSR The Obviousness Test
  • Graham v. John Deere Co. provides primary
    analysis
  • Scope and content of prior art
  • Differences between prior art and claimed
    invention
  • Level of ordinary skill in the art
  • Presence or absence of secondary indicia of
    non-obviousness
  • TSM test can still be used, but weakened

15
KSR The Obviousness Test (contd)
  • Additional guidelines to consider
  • Introduction of new or different functions
  • Unexpected results
  • Results that far surpass those existing in the
    art
  • A long passage of time without achieving the
    invention in view of the cited art

16
KSR A Sneak Peak at the Future?
  • The Court hints that the presumption of validity
    is at risk.
  • We need not reach the question whether the
    failure to disclose Asano during the prosecution
    of the Teleflex patent voids the presumption of
    validity given to issued patents, for claim 4 is
    obvious despite the presumption. We nevertheless
    think it appropriate to note that the rationale
    underlying the presumption that the PTO in its
    expertise, has approved the claim seems much
    diminished here.
  • KSR, 127 S.Ct. at 1745.

17
KSR What Does It All Mean?
  • Top quality patent applications are important to
    survive invalidity challenges.
  • More obviousness rejections from PTO more
    difficult to obtain patents
  • Patent litigation may take longer increased
    invalidity challenges
  • District Court Judges may give less deference to
    Fed. Cir. precedent

18
KSR What Does It All Mean? (contd)
  • Prior art not cited during prosecution may be
    given extra weight
  • Increased burden is placed on patentee to
    establish non-obviousness
  • Obvious to try can now lead to invalidity
  • Reexaminations will likely become more prevalent

19
  • In re Seagate Tech.
  • 497 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2007)

20
Willfulness Before Seagate
  • Potential infringer has affirmative duty to
    exercise due care to determine whether or not he
    is infringing a known patent.
  • Underwater Devices inc., v. Morrison-Knudsen
    Co., 717 F.2d 1380, 1389-90 (Fed. Cir. 1983)
  • Affirmative duty ? non-infringement/invalidity
    opinions
  • Willfulness avoided by advice of counsel
    defense

21
Willfulness After Seagate
  • Willfulness requires objective recklessness
  • A patentee must show by clear and convincing
    evidence that the infringer acted despite an
    objectively high likelihood that its actions
    constituted infringement of a valid patent.
  • In re Seagate, 497 F.3d at 1371.

22
Willfulness After Seagate
  • Patentee must also demonstrate that this
    objectively-defined risk . . . was either known
    or so obvious that it should have been known to
    the accused infringer.

23
Willfulness After Seagate
  • Underwater Devices overruled
  • No affirmative obligation to obtain opinion of
    counsel

24
Willfulness after Seagate
  • Willfulness depends on prelitigation conduct
  • Remedy for post-filing willful infringement
  • Preliminary Injunction

25
Effects of Seagate
  • Enhanced damages for willfulness limited to
    prelitigation conduct
  • Need for Preliminary Injunction proceedings must
    be considered
  • Asserting advice of counsel defense does not
    waive privilege or work product with trial
    counsel
  • Opinions likely not needed post-filing

26
Seagate Unanswered Questions
  • What is waiver scope if opinion counsel trial
    counsel?
  • What is waiver scope if opinion counsel
    in-house counsel?
  • Is enhanced damages limited to willfulness?
  • Exactly how will the objective recklessness
    standard be applied?

27
  • Nilssen v. Osram Sylvania, Inc.,
  • 504 F.3d 1223 (Fed. Cir. 2007)

28
  • Lessons in inequitable conduct . . .
  • what not to do.

29
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • Disclose any relationship of affiants with
    applicant.
  • Relationship is material to credibility and
    content of affidavits
  • Failure to disclose ? inequitable conduct

30
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • 2. Always pay proper entity fees
  • Improper payment of small entity fees ?
    inequitable conduct
  • Licensing to large entity large entity fees
  • 37 C.F.R. 1.27

31
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • 3. Ensure you claim priority properly
  • Claiming improper priority ? inequitable conduct

32
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • It is not necessary for a holding of inequitable
    conduct that an examiner rely on a claim for
    priority or that entitlement to an earlier
    priority date be expressly argued in order to
    overcome prior art.
  • Nilssen, 504 F.3d at 1233.

33
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • A claim for priority is inherently material to
    patentability because a priority date may
    determine validity, whether an issue arises in
    prosecution or later in court challenges to
    validity.
  • Nilssen, 504 F.3d at 1233.

34
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • 4. Disclose pending litigation involving related
    subject matter.
  • Failure to disclose litigation ? inequitable
    conduct

35
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • Where the subject matter for which a patent is
    being sought is or has been involved in
    litigation, the existence of such litigation and
    any other material information arising therefrom
    must be brought to the attention of the U.S.
    Patent and Trademark Office. Examples of such
    material information include evidence of possible
    prior public use or sales, questions of
    inventorship, prior art, allegations of fraud,
    inequitable conduct, and violation of duty of
    disclosure. Another example of such material
    information is any assertion that is made during
    litigation which is contradictory to assertions
    made to the examiner. Environ Prods., Inc. v.
    Total containment, Inc., 43 USPQ2d 1288, 1291
    (E.D. Pa. 1997). Such information might arise
    during litigation in, for example, pleadings,
    admissions, discovery including interrogatories,
    depositions, and other documents and testimony.
  • MPEP 2001.06(c)

36
Nilssen Inequitable Conduct
  • The existence of the litigation itself is
    material information that an examiner needs to
    have.
  • It signals to the examiner that other
    material information relevant to patentability
    may become available through the litigation
    proceedings.
  • Nilssen, 504 F.3d at 1234.

37
  • LG Electronics v. Bizcom Electronics et al.,
  • 453 F.3d 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2006)

38
Patent Exhaustion at the Supreme Court
  • Quanta Computer Inc. v. LG Electronics,
  • U.S., No. 06-937, argued Jan. 16, 2008

39
Facts
  • LG licensed microprocessor patents to Intel
  • Defendants bought microprocessors from Intel
  • License did not authorize purchasers of
    microprocessors to combine them with non-Intel
    products
  • Intel gave notice of this restriction to
    purchasers
  • LG filed suit on system patents

40
Federal Circuit Ruling
  • LGs sale to Intel was conditional
  • License expressly disclaimed allowing computer
    manufacturers to combine chips with non-Intel
    components
  • Patent exhaustion did not apply to combination
    patents
  • Lawsuit against purchasers of licensed
    microprocessors was allowed

41
Issues Raised By LG Case
  1. Can patent rights granted for article patents
    cause exhaustion of rights in system patents?
  2. Can a patentee extract royalties twice for a
    licensed product?
  3. Should article claims and system claims be
    put in separate patents?
  4. Buyers of licensed products may need to perform a
    due diligence of license/notices related to
    product.
  5. Sellers of licensed products may have to provide
    notices to buyers of limited rights.

42
  • In re Bilski,
  • No. 2007-1130 (Fed. Cir.)

43
In re Bilski
  • Argument, May 8, 2008 at 200 p.m.
  • en banc review
  • The fate of business method patents at stake

44
In re Bilski
  • Claim 1
  • A method for managing the consumption risk costs
    of a commodity sold by a commodity provider at a
    fixed price comprising the steps of
  • (a) Initiating a series of transactions between
    said commodity provider and consumers of said
    commodity wherein said consumers purchase said
    commodity at a fixed rate based upon historical
    averages, said fixed rate corresponding to a risk
    position of said consumer
  • Identifying market participants for said
    commodity having a counter-risk position to said
    consumers and
  • Initiating a series of transactions between said
    commodity provider and said market participants
    at a second fixed rate such that said series of
    consumer transactions.

45
Federal Circuit Questions
  • Does Claim 1 claim patent-eligible subject matter
    under 35 U.S.C. 101?
  • What standard should govern whether a process is
    patent-eligible under 101?
  • 3.(a) Whether claimed subject matter is not
    patent-eligible because it constitutes an
    abstract idea or mental process?

46
Federal Circuit Questions
  • 3.(b) When does a claim that contains both
    mental and physical steps create patent-eligible
    subject matter?
  • 4. Whether a method or process must result in a
    physical transformation of an article or be tied
    to a machine to be patent-eligible under 101?
  • 5. Should the court reconsider State Street Bank
    and ATT v. Excel cases should they be overruled?

47
  • Russell J. Genet
  • Nixon Peabody, LLP
  • 161 N. Clark Street
  • 48th Floor
  • Chicago, Illinois 60601
  • rgenet_at_nixonpeabody.com
  • 312-425-8516 (direct dial)

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