Title: 3rd party statutory bar activity
13rd party statutory bar activity
2Cleanup issues
- Atlanta Attachment on-sale or public use?
- Apparently the former
3Chisum on experimental use
- The better and prevailing view is that
experimental use can indeed continue even after
the invention has been completed and reduced to
practice as that term is used in patent law.
Unfortunately, many Federal Circuit decisions
articulate the former, less-preferred position,
to wit, that experimental use cannot extend
beyond reduction to practice. This leads to
considerable confusion.
4 102. Novelty and loss of right to patent
- A person shall be entitled to a patent unless
- (a) the invention was known or used by others in
this country, or patented or described in a
printed publication in this or a foreign country,
before the invention thereof by the applicant for
patent, or - (b) the invention was patented etc more than
one year prior to the date of the application for
patent in the United States, or . . . .
5 102. Novelty and loss of right to patent
- A person shall be entitled to a patent unless
- (a) the invention was known or used by others
before the invention thereof by the applicant for
patent, or - (b) the invention was patented or described in a
printed publication , more than one year prior
to the date of the application for patent . . . .
6When would a statutory bar invalidate, but not
102(a)?
7When would a statutory bar invalidate, but not
102(a)?
- When 1 a qualifying reference enters the prior
art 2 after the applicants date of invention,
but 3 more than 1 year prior to applicants
filing date
8Statutory Bars and 3rd party activity
- Are the same policies implicated?
- Look again to unique situations where only a
statutory bar will invalidate the patent
9Practicalities
- Some 3rd party prior art may be
difficult/expensive to find - Rarely during prosecution
- Labor-intensive discovery
- On sale, some public use compare to known or
used publicly under 102(a)
10Novelty and the economics of search
- Page 417
- How did defendants find out about prior art in
Baxter and WL Gore? - Interference, Baxter
- Public use (?) by Budd, WL Gore
11Baxter
- What category of section 102 prior art is at
issue here?
12(No Transcript)
13Issues on appeal
- Was Suaudeau Itos use public?
- Was it experimental not yet completed?
- Different standards for 3rd party
experimentation, vs inventors own
experimentation?
14Holding
- Suaudeaus use was public, and it was not
experimental in a manner that saves Cullis
patent. -- p. 572
15Baxter International v. Cobe Labs, Inc.
- Q How is this case different from Rosaire?
- A They are similar in that the courts in both
find public uses by third parties in
circumstances where the use would be hard to
discover by the applicant. There are two
differences
16Distinguishing Rosaire
- (2) Rosaire used the invention in the ordinary
course of business. Here Suaudeau used the
invention in a lab. Its not clear that it was
ever used in the ordinary course of a business
(even accepting that research could be a
business). - (1) Baxter is a statutory bar case. Thus, the
prior public use cannot be defeated by proof of
earlier invention it creates problems for Itos
patent application too.
17Hypothetical
- Q Inventor conceives of a new widget on
1/1/2000. Thief steals the plans, builds the
widget and, unknown to the inventor, sells a copy
on 2/1/2000. The inventor meanwhile sells some
prototypes to determine if the new widget works.
She requires customers to report on the
performance of the invention. The inventor is
satisfied with the tests on 3/1/2001 and then
files an application. Can she get a patent?
18Hypothetical
- A Probably not. Sales by thieves do start the
one-year clock of 102(b) running. Evans Cooling
Sys. v. General Motors Corp., 125 F.3d 1448 (Fed.
Cir. 1997). Here the inventors own sales were
probably experimental, but the thiefs was not.
Perhaps, however, the inventor could argue that
the invention was not yet ready for patenting
at the time of the thiefs sale.
19Newman dissent
- Opposes secret prior art
- See Pitlick p 609
- 3rd party 102(b) art should be narrowly limited
- liberal test of publicness
- Consistent with policies?
20W. L. Gore Assoc. v. Garlock, Inc.
- 1966 John Cropper of New Zealand develops a
machine for producing stretched and unstretched
PTFE thread seal tape. -
- 1967 Cropper sends a letter to a company in
Massachusetts offering to sell his machine,
describing its operation, and enclosing a photo.
Nothing comes of that letter. There is no
evidence and no finding that the present
inventions thereby became known or used in this
country.
21Gore
- 1968 Cropper sells his machine to Budd in US but
requires Budd to keep the operation of the
machine a secret, which Budd does. Budd uses the
machine to produce seal tape. -
- May 21, 1970 Gore files a patent application on
a process for stretching PTFE material that is
similar to Croppers process.
22W. L. Gore Assoc. v. Garlock, Inc.
- Q Why doesnt Gore have a novelty problem?
- A The process wasnt publicly known, so it
doesnt qualify under 102(a). Theres no 102(e)
issue. Croppers process could not be considered
under 102(g)(2) because Cropper was
concealing/suppressing the process.
23Gore
- Q Why isnt Croppers 1967 letter an offer to
sell? - A Probably because he was not offering to sell
the process, only the machine. Moreover, as we
know from his later activity with Budd, the sale
of the machine would have been subject to a
secrecy restriction. - Q Why isnt Budds use of the machine a bar?
- A Budds use of the machine is not a public
use of the process because he kept the process
secret.
24- Q Could Cropper have applied for a U.S. patent
in 1970? -
- A No!!! An inventors own prior commercial
use, albeit kept secret, may constitute a public
use or sale under 102(b), barring him from
obtaining a patent. Woodland Trust v. Flowertree
Nursery, 148 F.3d 1368, 1370-71 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
Also Pennock supports this rule.
25Exp use in 3rd party cases??
- Suaudeaus use was public, and it was not
experimental in a manner that saves Cullis
patent. -- p. 572