Justia Patents Opinion Summaries
Articles Posted in U.S. Federal Circuit Court of Appeals
In re Aoyama
The examiner rejected claims 11 and 21 of Patent Application No. 505, titled "System and Method for Distribution Chain Management" as anticipated by a 2001 application. The Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences affirmed. The Federal Circuit affirmed on the alternate ground that there is no permissible construction of the claims, so they fail to satisfy the definiteness requirement of 35 U.S.C. 112. The court remanded to afford the applicant the right to amend.View "In re Aoyama" on Justia Law
Star Scientific, Inc. v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, Inc.
Plaintiff is the exclusive licensee of the patents, which claim tobacco curing methods. The district court found th patents invalid and entered a judgment of non-infringement. The Federal Circuit reversed with respect to validity but affirmed the finding of non-infringement. No reasonable juror could find that the patents were anticipated by prior use under 35 U.S.C. 102(b), nor were they obvious or indefinite. View "Star Scientific, Inc. v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, Inc." on Justia Law
Unigene Labs, Inc. v. Apotex, Inc.
Plaintiff owns a patent on an FDA-approved (21 U.S.C. 355(b)(2) ) pharmaceutical nasal spray Fortical, used to treat osteoporsis, with the active ingredient salmon calcitonin. In its FDA filing, plaintiff identified the drug as bioidentical to Miacalcin. Defendant filed an Abbreviated New Drug Application with the FDA, stating intent to make, use, offer to sell, sell, and/or import a generic version of Fortical product before the expiration of plaintiff's patent. Plaintiff claimed infringement. Defendant alleged invalidity under 35 U.S.C. 101, 102, 103,and 112, noninfringement and inequitable conduct in failure to disclose an allegedly material piece of prior art and making allegedly misleading statements during patent prosecution. The district court found that the patent would not have been obvious at the time of invention, denied defendant's motion to breach the attorney-client privilege under the crime-fraud exception, and determined that defendant had waived several counter-claims. The Federal Circuit affirmed. Even accepting that there was a design need and market pressure to develop a pharmaceutical formulation bioequivalent to Miacalcin, there was no evidence that the claim would be an obvious solution to those motivations.View "Unigene Labs, Inc. v. Apotex, Inc." on Justia Law
Genetics Inst., LLC v.Novartis Vaccines & Diagnostics, Inc.
The district court dismissed plaintiff's suit (35 U.S.C. 291) alleging interference with patent claims relating to truncated forms of an essential blood-clotting protein. The Federal Circuit affirmed, after first holding that the expiration of one of the patents following the district court’s final decision did not strip it of jurisdiction over the appeal. The district court properly determined that there was no interference in fact.
View "Genetics Inst., LLC v.Novartis Vaccines & Diagnostics, Inc." on Justia Law
August Tech. Corp. v. Camtek, Ltd.
Plaintiffs asserted infringement of claims 1 and 3 of the patent, directed to a system and a method for inspecting integrated circuits printed on substrates such as wafers. The jury found that defendant's device infringed both claims, but that the infringement was not willful, and awarded about $6.8 million in lost profits. Because the jury found that plaintiff's NSX-80 wafer inspection machine was not prior art, the court held that there was no need for a separate trial on defendant's inequitable conduct claim, based on plaintiff's nondisclosure of the NSC-80 to the patent office. The Federal Circuit affirmed dismissal of the inequitable conduct claim, but reversed and remanded the determination of infringement and award of damages and injunction. The court improperly construed the claim in defining a wafer as any portion of a wafer having two or more dies. A wafer, as recited in the claims at issue, refers to a thin, discrete slice of semiconductor material with circuitry thereon that is ready for electrical testing having one or more dies. A plurality of wafers means more than one physically distinct wafer. View "August Tech. Corp. v. Camtek, Ltd." on Justia Law
Cybersource Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc.
Plaintiff's patent recites a method for detecting fraud in a credit card transaction over the Internet; the specification explains that prior systems, which generally rely on billing addresses and personal identification information, work well for face-to-face transactions and transactions where the merchant ships a package. For online sales where the product is downloadable, address and identity information do not verify that the purchaser is actually the credit card owner. The patent purports to solve this problem by determining whether an Internet address relating to a transaction is consistent with other Internet addresses that have been used with the same credit card. The district court granted summary judgment of invalidity under 35 U.S.C. 101 for failure to recite patent-eligible subject matter. The Federal Circuit affirmed, holding that the disputed claims attempt to capture unpatentable abstract ideas. One could mentally perform the fraud detection method that underlies the patent, as the method consists of only the general approach of obtaining information about credit card transactions utilizing an Internet address and then using that information in some undefined manner to determine if the credit card transaction is valid. View "Cybersource Corp. v. Retail Decisions, Inc." on Justia Law
CBT Flint Partners, LLC v. Return Path, Inc.
The owner of patents relating to methods and systems for charging a fee for sending unsolicited and unwanted e-mail (spam) and claimed infringement. The district court construed the claim as containing a drafting error and granted summary judgment of invalidity, holding that the claim indefinite under 35 U.S.C. 112. The Federal Circuit reversed and remanded. The claim is not indefinite, but has an obvious and correctable error, construction of which is not subject to reasonable debate by those skilled in the art. The district court had authority to correct the supposed error. The claim reads: "the computer
being programmed to detect analyze the electronic mail communication sent by the sending party to determine whether or not the sending party is an authorized sending party or an unauthorized sending party." The addition of the word "and" between "detect" and "analyze" corrects an obvious error. View "CBT Flint Partners, LLC v. Return Path, Inc." on Justia Law
MHL Tek, LLC v. Nissan Motor Co.
The company filed suit against numerous automobile manufacturers for infringement of three patents relating to tire pressure monitoring systems. The patent applications were filed in the 1990s and, in 2007, the inventors signed documents purporting to assign the patents to the company. The district court entered summary judgment of non-infringement of one claim and dismissed the others for lack of standing, based on a prior assignment. The court concluded that the claims at issue were not subject to an exclusion under an earlier assignment by the inventors. The Federal Circuit affirmed in part, holding that the company lacked standing with respect to all of the patents.
View "MHL Tek, LLC v. Nissan Motor Co." on Justia Law
In re NTP, Inc.
The rejected patent claim is one of several that describe a system for sending information (electronic mail) from an originating processor (personal computer) to a destination processor (mobile computer) using an intermediary (radio frequency receiver). Prior art systems required connection to a public switched phone line and were limited by difficulty in locating a phone jack. The Board of Patent Appeals affirmed the rejection, construing the term "destination processor," to mean the "particular end node device to which the intended user recipient of electronic mail has immediate and direct physical access when accessing and viewing electronic mail;" determining that the applicant was not entitled to claim priority; and finding that the claim was anticipated by prior art. The Federal Circuit affirmed. The Board properly relied on the written description in construing "destination processor." Nothing in 35 U.S.C. 301 prohibits an examiner from determining, on re-examination, whether a priority date was properly claimed during the original examination; such a determination was proper in this case because the examiner did not consider priority during the original prosecution. View "In re NTP, Inc." on Justia Law
In re NTP, Inc.
The seven rejected patent claims describe a system for sending information (such as electronic mail) from an originating processor (i.e., a personal computer) to a destination processor (i.e., a mobile computer) using an intermediary (a radio frequency receiver). Prior art systems required connection to a public switched phone line and were limited by difficulty in locating a phone jack. The inventors set out to solve this problem by introducing a radio frequency network. The Board of Patent Appeals affirmed. The Federal Circuit vacated in part, reversed in part and remanded. The Board’s construction of the term "electronic mail [message]" was unreasonably broad, but the Board correctly found that the applicant failed to "swear behind" certain references (37 C.F.R. 1.131) and corroborate its claim that the system was reduced to practice prior to the "critical date" on which it appeared in print. View "In re NTP, Inc." on Justia Law