March 10, 2010

i4i Review Redux

Microsoft has prevailed upon the CAFC to rehear, en banc, only the willfulness portion of its affirmation of the district court ruling in i4i v. Microsoft. In other words, the CAFC cut Microsoft a break, probably because the CAFC wants another bite at cleaning up the willfulness standard. A revised CAFC ruling was issued today that takes out the sentence: "Microsoft does not challenge the jury instructions on willfulness or the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury's willfulness finding," and adds a section on willfulness to its revised ruling.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 5:54 PM | Infringement | Comments (0)

March 9, 2010

Less Than Best Mode

The American arm of Japan's Ajinomoto complained to the ITC to stop foreign imports of dietary supplement lysine, under the aegis of 5,827,698 and 6,040,160. The snag was that their patent applications didn't actually disclose their production techniques. That cost them the patents for failing to meet best mode, and inequitable conduct for knowingly doing so.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:18 PM | § 112 | Comments (8)

March 7, 2010

Whole Wallet

Taking a break from the frigid east Washington winter, CAFC Judge Rader has been marshalling in Marshall. Rader's adjudicating an East Texas patent brawl between IP Innovation and Linux vendors Red Hat and Novell. Judge Rader takes no wooden nickels as the Linux twins sought to toss IPI's damages expert as a Daubert deuce. Herein the good Judge smokes one.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:47 PM | Damages | Comments (2)

March 5, 2010

Cool Analogy

5,955,955 claims a computer drive bay fan, meant to cool the hard drives right in their own living room. '955 owner Comaper sued Antec for infringement. Trial found Antec willfully infringing some claims. Some claims were obvious to the jury, others validly novel. Appeal found that "irreconcilably inconsistent." The CAFC resolution was to define analogous art as either "from the same field of endeavor," or "reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which the inventor is involved." Upon that the CAFC created its own reconcilable inconsistency.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 9:10 PM | Prior Art | Comments (6)

March 3, 2010

Momentos

Media Technologies sued Upper Deck for infringing two memorabilia patents: 5,803,501 & 6,142,532. After a trip to the CAFC on district court summary judgment over res judicata (reversed), trial court proceedings were stayed pending reexamination. Both patents made it through reexam unscathed. Then, based on claim construction, Upper Deck got the upper hand by summary judgment over obviousness.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:44 PM | Prior Art | Comments (14)

February 27, 2010

Static

Trading Technologies sued eSpeed and Ecco for infringing 6,772,132 & 6,766,304, which go to displaying "static price levels" on a computerized board for commodity trading. One service product infringed, but others literally did not, and applying the doctrine of equivalents was proscribed. Defenses to indefiniteness and inequitable conduct went nowhere, as did on-sale bar (§ 102(b)) based on a provisional priority date. Affirmation on appeal toted up dynamic case law quotes, not on sale, but ones that litigators must buy.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 4:59 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (3)

February 25, 2010

Crock

The International Trade Clowns (ITC) handed a crock to clog maker Crocs when it asserted 6,993,858 and D517,789: '858 was found obvious and '789 not infringed. Crocs squealed and appealed to the CAFC, which stepped in it and splattered the ITC with both feet: utility and design patent case law.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 11:24 PM | ITC | Comments (9)

February 24, 2010

Fragments

Andrew Chapman and David King had a patent idea "directed to divalent antibody fragments comprising two antibody heavy chains and at least one polymer molecule attached to the heavy chains in a site-specific manner on each chain... Chapman's invention involves joining together two fragments with an interchain bridge containing a polymer, thus achieving a circulating half-life that is intermediate between that of an individual fragment and a whole antibody."

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 6:34 PM | Prior Art | Comments (1)

February 19, 2010

Floored

"Pergo and Alloc are direct competitors in the field of laminate flooring. Pergo owns the 6,421,970 and 6,397,547 patents, which relate to mechanical joints that enable flooring panels to be joined without the use of glue or other fasteners, such as nails or metal clips. Alloc brought a declaratory judgment action against Pergo seeking a declaration that the '970 and '547 patents were invalid, unenforceable, and not infringed. Pergo counterclaimed for infringement of both patents." Both patents were found "invalid on multiple grounds and not infringed." Having achieved its goal, Alloc then overreached to inequitable conduct, which the district court denied.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 9:37 AM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

February 18, 2010

Relatively Stiff

Yousef Daneshvar filed a patent application claiming : "an apparatus for dressing a wound. The invention features a 'relatively stiff support' that is secured over the wound using one or more 'relatively stretchable straps.'" The BPAI rejected Daneshvar's claims as anticipated and obvious over 5,779,657. Daneshvar had to go to the CAFC to get PTO incompetence overturned.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:42 AM | Prosecution | Comments (33)

February 9, 2010

Why the Hawk

A friend and client, India born, was telling me about the different prior art search firms he had used. "The Indians are cheap, and you get what you pay for. They find something and they quit. They know nothing about litigation, or U.S. patent laws. They have no concept of story art. They just throw a piece or two of art over the wall to you and declare victory. The European Patent Office searches like examiners. What else would you expect? They do okay for a superficial search, but for a litigation search, they are incomplete. Like the Indians, the EPO also just cites references."

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:52 PM | Prior Art | Comments (2)

February 8, 2010

Unpublished

ResQNet sued Lansa in 2001 for infringing five patents related to terminal emulation. Lansa found art, two unpublished user manuals for a software product called Flashpoint, that it argued anticipated one of the asserted patents, 6,295,075. But the district court wouldn't admit the art as public, and hence not legally prior art. Lansa tried to argue that NewLook 1.0 anticipated '075 by being sold more than a year prior to 075's filing date, but NewLook 1.0 "lacked an essential limitation," so was not found to be invalidating prior art. Alas for Lansa, a later version of NewLook was found to have the feature, and so infringed. Then there were the issues of damages, and sanctions....

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:52 PM | Prior Art | Comments (1)

February 7, 2010

Deep Fryer

SEB sued Montgomery Ward and others for infringing 4,995,312 by selling a cheap deep fryer manufactured by Pentalpha. Speedy justice meant that getting to trial took a mere seven years, whereupon a jury found willful infringement, awarding $4.65 million in damages, which the district court judge hence cut by $2 million. The district court had awarded enhanced damages and attorneys' fees to SEB, but then snatched them back in light of the 2007 CAFC Seagate ruling that willfully gutted willfulness. Herein, a tale of disingenuity, and an appeal decision greasing understanding of inducing infringement.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:29 PM | Infringement | Comments (1)

February 2, 2010

Inherent Anticipation

Abbott sued Beckton, Dickinson and Company and Nova Biomedical for infringing 5,628,890, which claims a glucose sensor. A jury found '890 anticipated. Abbott appealed the trial judge's jury instruction over the meaning of anticipation. The CAFC surveyed the boundary of inherency, and found the nugget: "all elements must be disclosed in an anticipatory reference in the same way as they are arranged or combined in the claim."

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 2:48 AM | Prior Art | Comments (4)

January 29, 2010

Diabetic

5,820,551 claims single-use test strips for measuring blood sugar, useful for diabetics. Becton, Dickinson and Company threw down a declaratory judgment (DJ) action on competitor Abbott over a couple other patents. Abbott countered with a suit that also asserted '551. Weak move. The DJ worked: summary judgment of non-infringement and anticipation of numerous claims of one patent. '551 underwent a bench trial, and didn't survive the operation: invalid due to obviousness and unenforceable due to inequitable conduct. Abbott appealed.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:25 AM | Prior Art | Comments (0)

January 26, 2010

Restricted Reply

37 CFR § 41.37, on appeal briefs, fully covers regulation of arguments made on appeal: "Any arguments or authorities not included in the brief or a reply brief filed pursuant to § 41.41 will be refused consideration by the Board, unless good cause is shown." 37 CFR § 41.41, on reply briefs: "A reply brief shall not include any new or non-admitted amendment, or any new or non-admitted affidavit or other evidence." In a January 7, 2010 expanded-panel BPAI ruling ex parte Borden, denying a rehearing of an appeal, the Board ruled much more restrictively on reply briefs: "The reply brief is not an opportunity to make arguments that could have been made during prosecution, but were not. Nor is the reply brief an opportunity to make arguments that could have been made in the principal brief on appeal to rebut the Examiner's rejections, but were not."

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:40 AM | Prosecution | Comments (0)

January 25, 2010

Quinn the Eskimo

Charming Gene Quinn of IPWatchdog is running a hot streak. An anonymous comment crowning Quinn "the King of Douchebags" put him enough out of sorts to change his web site to admit only registered supplicants to comment on his blog. One can only speculate as to his apoplexy if he instead had been titled the Queen of Douche Bags. Quinn's expressed desire is "to encourage an atmosphere free of the petty and vile Internet discourse that so many traffic in these days." Apparently, someone else has the same goal. Invent Help is suing Quinn for "false and misleading claims in their Internet advertising." Invent Help and Quinn compete to service inventors. Quinn opines that "they apparently do not like the fact that I have written about invention submission scams..." Apparently not.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 8:11 PM | | Comments (18)

January 22, 2010

Vexed Fax

Catch Curve owns a family of five fax patents, the parent of which is 4,994,926. The patents "patents focus on the use of a computer-based device known as a 'store and forward facility,' or SAFF." A SAFF can forward a fax over telephone lines to a fax machine or to another SAFF. Catch Curve sued Venali with its five patents. A narrow claim construction resulted in requiring the use of the facsimile protocol, and that transmission was over a switched telephone network. Caught out, Catch Curve curtailed its assertion, but lost in summary judgment on noninfringement, leading to a last gasp transmission to the appeals court.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 1:28 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)

January 19, 2010

Scan This

"Believe it or not, in our patent office -- now, this is embarrassing -- this is an institution responsible for protecting and promoting innovation -- our patent office receives more than 80 percent of patent applications electronically, then manually prints them out, scans them, and enters them into an outdated case management system. This is one of the reasons why the average processing time for a patent is roughly three years." - President Obama

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 12:57 AM | The Patent Office | Comments (9)

January 15, 2010

Going Up

5,689,094 claims personal recognition that tells an elevator where to go. Patent owner Schindler Elevator tried to get a lift over Otis Elevator, but Otis got a summary judgment of noninfringement by construction of claim, which was a shame, because, on appeal, the district court took the blame. The CAFC told the district court where to go, while leaving the final destination indefinite.

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Posted by Patent Hawk at 10:32 PM | Claim Construction | Comments (0)