Clear and Unmistakable Disavowal Incorporated by Reference

In X2Y Attenuators, LLC v. ITC,  2013-1340 (Fed. Cir. 2014), the Federal Circuit affirmed the ITC’s construction of U.S. Patent Nos. 7,609,500, 7,916,444, and 8,023,241. Intel argued that the claims should be limited to a sandwich configuration, while X2Y contended that the electrode terms require no construction and should be given their plain and ordinary meanings, and the ITX agreed with Intel.  The Federal Circuit agreed that the “exacting” standard of disavowall was:

The patents’ statements that the presence of a common conductive pathway electrode positioned between paired electromagnetically opposite conductors is “universal to all the embodiments” and is “an essential element among all embodiments or connotations of the invention” constitute clear and unmistakable disavowal of claim scope.

Labeling an element of embodiment “essential” has been found to be a disavowal, and further labelling it “universal to all embodiments” reinforced the conclusion.

One of the patents contained the “essential” disavowal, and the other patents incorporated the “essential” disavowal by reference.  All of the patents incorporated the “universal” disavowal.  The Federal Circuit said that the incorporated patents are “effectively part of the host patents as if they were explicitly contained therein.”  The Federal Circuit conceded that it was possible that a clear and unmistakable disavowal in an incorporated patent is no longer so when placed in the context of the disclosure of the host patent, but that was not the case with the patents in suit.

The lesson of this case is to be careful what its described as “essential” or “universal,” both in the current specification, and in anything incorporated by reference

 

Different Words Have Different Meanings

One interesting apect of Augme Technologies, Inc. v. Yahoo! Inc., 2013-1121, -1195 (June 20, 2014), is the Federal Circuit’s application of the Claim Construction Cannon that different words have different meanings.  The claim required an “embeded code module,”   The Federal Circuit noted that each asserted claim recites that the first code module is “embedded” or “configured to be embedded” and that the second code module is “retrieve[d]” or “download[ed].” The Federal Circuit found that this distinction creates a presumption that “embedded” means something different than “retrieved” or “downloaded, ” citing Helmsderfer v. Bobrick Washroom Equip., Inc., 527 F.3d 1379, 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (“[D]ifferent claim terms are presumed to have different meanings.”); Applied Med. Res. Corp. v. U.S. Surgical Corp, 448 F.3d 1324, 1333 n.3 (Fed. Cir. 2006).  Having created a distinction between embedded  and retrieved and downloaded in structuring its claims, the patent owner could not argue that these different terms meant the same thing.

 

Supreme Court: Claims Must Inform, with Reasonable Certainty

Nautlius, Inc. v. Biosig Instruments, Inc., — U.S. —, (2014), the Supreme Court rejected the Federal Circuit’s “insolubly ambiguous” test for indefiniteness under 35 U.S.C. §112, holding that “a patent is invalid for indefiniteness if its claims, read in light of the specification delineating the patent, and the prosecution history, fail to inform, with reasonable certainty, those skilled in the art about the scope of the invention.” The case arrived at the Supreme Court after the Federal Circuit reversed a district court finding that the claims of U.S. Patent No. 5,337,753 on a heart rate monitor, which claimed electrodes contained the language “spaced relationship” were indefinite. The Supreme Court “cognizant of the competing concerns” read Section 112 to require that a patent’s claims , viewed in light of the prosecution history, inform those skilled in the art about the scope of the invention with reasonable certainty.” The Supreme Court explained that this standard “mandates clarity, while recognizing that absolute precision is unattainable” and accords with the Court’s decisions that the certainty that the law requires of patents “is not greater than is reasonable, having regard to their subject-matter.” The Court declined to apply the standard to the claims, remanding the case for further consideration.

Plain Meaning

GE Lighting Solutions, LLC v. Agilight, Inc., 2013-1267 (May 1, 2014), the Federal Circuti revesrsed the district court’s claim construction of the term “IDC connector” which imported limitations from the preferred embodiment.  The Federal Circuit said that the specification and prosecution history only compel departure from the plain meaning in two instances: lexicography and disavowal.  The Federal Circuit added: The standards for finding lexicography and disavowal are exacting. To act as its own lexicographer, a patentee must clearly set forth a definition of the disputed claim term, and clearly express an intent to define the term.  Similarly, disavowal requires that “the specification or prosecution history make clear that the invention does not include a particular feature.  The Federal Circuit found no lexicography or disavowal, and reitereated that a patent that only discloses one embodiemtn is not necessarily limited to that one embodiment.  In construing “substantially ellipsoidal inner profile” the Federal Circuit applied another classic canon of claim construction: one normally do not construe claims in a manner that would exclude the preferred embodiment, especially where it is the only disclosed embodiment.

 

 

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Mayo, Myriad, and Multi-factor balancing tests

Updated subject matter eligibility guidance from the USPTO

On the same day that the Supreme Court’s opinion was handed down in Assoc. for Mol. Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, 133 S. Ct. 2107 (2013), the U.S. Patent Office issued a “memorandum… to provide preliminary guidance” (“memorandum”) for Examiners to use in light of the Myriad holding. This memorandum indicated that further guidelines would be coming in the future, and on 4 March 2014 they finally arrived (“guidelines”). These guidelines apply most particularly to inventions that might fall into the “product of nature” and “law of nature” exceptions to subject matter eligibility; the guidelines are careful to make clear (pg. 1) that “[t]here is no change to examination of claims reciting an abstract idea, which should continue to be analyzed for subject matter eligibility using the existing guidance in MPEP § 2106(II),” (emphasis in original). The guidelines supersede the previous memorandum, and answer important questions that the memorandum left unaddressed. The following points are worth noting:

(1)  Although the holding of Myriad only specifically addressed “naturally occurring DNA,” (Id. at 2111), the logic by which the Court arrived at this conclusion would appear to apply with equal force to other naturally occurring substances, such as proteins, lipids, viruses, etc. The initial post-Myriad memorandum was careful to confine itself only to the subject of nucleic acids (pg. 1, “Examiners should now reject product claims drawn solely to naturally occurring nucleic acids or fragments thereof…” emphasis in original). Indeed, the PTO evidently still believes that Myriad’s holding applies only to nucleic acids (guidelines, pg. 1 “the holding in Myriad was limited to nucleic acids…”).

      Nevertheless, the new guidelines make clear that they apply beyond just nucleic acids (pg. 3, “If the claim recites or involves… something that appears to be a natural product (e.g., a citrus fruit, uranium metal, nucleic acid, protein, etc.), then the claim only qualifies as eligible subject matter if the claim as a whole recites something significantly different than the judicial exception itself,” bold/italic in original, underlining added).

(2) The new guidelines provide a flow chart for determining subject matter eligibility, which ends with a multi-factor balancing test that the guidelines liken to the Wands factors for enablement determination. The guidelines strongly favor use of these Wands-like factors (pg. 3, “If there is any doubt as to whether the claim recites a judicial exception… the claim requires further analysis under Question 3. For example, if the claimed product is a protein or a mineral, then the analysis must proceed to Question 3…” emphasis in original).

Myriad chart

This is true even when the analysis arguably could stop at Question 2. For example, page 5 of the new guidelines give the example of a claim “A bacterium from the genus Pseudomonas containing therein at least two stable energy-generating plasmids, each of said plasmids providing a separate hydrocarbon degradative pathway.” It is at least possible that such a Pseudomonas exists in nature, but the guidelines are careful to make clear (pg. 6) that this possibility is not enough to sustain a §101 rejection. In this respect, the guidelines are following Myriad, where the court indicated in dictum that the mere theoretical possibility that something exists in nature is not enough to bring a claim into the “product of nature” exception. Myriad, 133 S. Ct. at 2119 n.8.

The multi-factor balancing test gives a number of points to consider, no one of which is supposed to be determinative. The points include:
Factors that weigh toward eligibility:

a) Claim is a product claim reciting something that initially appears to be a natural product, but after analysis is determined to be non-naturally occurring and markedly different in structure from naturally occurring products.
b) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that impose meaningful limits on claim scope, i.e., the elements/steps narrow the scope of the claim so that others are not substantially foreclosed from using the judicial exception(s).
c) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that relate to the judicial exception in a significant way, i.e., the elements/steps are more than nominally, insignificantly, or tangentially related to the judicial exception(s).
d) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that do more than describe the judicial exception(s) with general instructions to apply or use the judicial exception(s).
e) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that include a particular machine or transformation of a particular article, where the particular machine/transformation implements one or more judicial exception(s) or integrates the judicial exception(s) into a particular practical application. (See MPEP 2106(II)(B)(1) for an explanation of the machine or transformation factors).
f) Claim recites one or more elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that add a feature that is more than well-understood, purely conventional or routine in the relevant field.

AND

Factors that weigh against eligibility:

g) Claim is a product claim reciting something that appears to be a natural product that is not markedly different in structure from naturally occurring products.
h) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) at a high level of generality such that substantially all practical applications of the judicial exception(s) are covered
i) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that must be used/taken by others to apply the judicial exception(s).
j) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that are well-understood, purely conventional or routine in the relevant field.
k) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that are insignificant extra-solution activity, e.g., are merely appended to the judicial exception(s).
l) Claim recites elements/steps in addition to the judicial exception(s) that amount to nothing more than a mere field of use.

As with most multi-factor tests, some factors appear in practice to matter more than others. For composition claims, all the work is done by factors (a) and (g) in the examples. For method claims, factors (b), (c), (h), and (i) appear to do most of the work. In the examples given, factor (e) appears somewhat superfluous (see, e.g. Example E, claim 2, pg. 13 and Example F, claim 1, pg. 14).

(3) Perhaps most significantly, the PTO has reaffirmed that the subject matter eligibility analysis must be conducted on the claim as a whole (guidelines pg. 3, “Question 3”). This is important, because some District Courts read Mayo Serv. v. Prometheus Labs, 132 S. Ct. 1289 (2012) to hold that claims should be broken up into “routine” and “novel” elements, with the “routine” elements playing no role in the §101 determination. See, e.g., Ariosa Diagnostics v. Sequenom, Inc., No. C11-06391, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 156554, at *27–30 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 30, 2013).

(4) Finally, it is worth considering two examples that the guidelines provide of claims that the PTO considers subject-matter eligible, even in view of Mayo. On pages 7 and 15 the following exemplary claims are provided:

A method of treating colon cancer, comprising:
administering a daily dose of purified amazonic acid to a patient suffering from colon cancer for a period of time from 10 days to 20 days,
wherein said daily dose comprises about 0.75 to about 1.25 teaspoons of amazonic acid.

A method for treating a mood disorder in a human patient, the mood disorder associated with neuronal activity in the patient’s brain, comprising:
providing a light source that emits white light;
filtering the ultra-violet (UV) rays from the white light; and
positioning the patient adjacent to the light source at a distance between 30–60 cm for a predetermined period ranging from 30–60 minutes to expose photosensitive regions of the patient’s brain to the filtered white light, wherein the exposure to the filtered white light alters the neuronal activity in the patient’s brain and mitigates the mood disorder.

The guidelines provide that both of these claims are patent eligible, despite the fact that at their inner-most core, the claims involve a law of nature (viz., the ability of amazonic acid to combat cancer in the first example, the ability of light exposure to treat a mood-disorder in the second). The guidelines explain that the additional limitations, in particular “10 days to 20 days,” “0.75 to about 1.25 teaspoons,” and “colon cancer” (as distinct from “cancer” more generally) (pg. 8) in the first example and “distance between 30–60 cm” and “filtering the ultra-violet (UV) rays” (pg. 17) in the second example create a significant difference between the claim and the bare recitation of the law of nature.

Therefore, when facing a subject matter eligibility rejection predicated on a law of nature exception, it seems worthwhile to add details such as dosage and disease to the independent claim (provided, of course, that there is written description support for the limitation). Ideally, one could create a series of independent claims that would dominate the entire field, even though each single independent claim would be restricted enough to be subject matter eligible. That is to say, instead of claiming a “method of treating cancer,” one can write the application to disclose every known cancer individually, and then claim different cancers in different claims.

Usage in Other Claims Reveals Meaning (without Claim Differentiation)

In Ancora Technologies, INc. v. Apple, Inc., [2013-1378, -1414] (Fed. Cir. 2014), the Federal Circuit reversed the district courts claim construction, which limited “programs” to applications, thereby excluding operating systems.  The Federal Circuit said that unless the patentee has made clear its adoption of a different definition or otherwise disclaimed that meaning. See, e.g., Thorner v. Sony Computer Entm’t Am. LLC, 669 F.3d 1362, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2012). The Federal Circuit found no reason in the case to depart from the term’s ordinary meaning. Ahthoungh not strictly claim differentialtion, the Federal Circuit found that the text of other claims, not in issue, which use specifically referenced “application software program” indicated that “program” in the claims at issue should be more broadly construed.

The Federal Circuit also rejected Apple’s attempt to manufacture uncertainty over the meanings of “volatile” and “non-volatile” based on “oddly phrased” reference to a hard disck as an example of volatile memory. Finding the terms had well understood meanigns, the cited passages in the specification had a reasoanble explanation, and the prosecution history removed all doubts.

Interesting is the Court’s description of claim differentiation as an interpretive principle “often of limited importance”.

Federal Circuit: We Were Right the First Time, Claim Construction is Reviewed De Novo on Appeal

In Lighting Ballast Control LLC, v. Philips Electronics North America Corporation, [2012-1014] (February 21, 2014), the Federal Circuit en banc held that claim construction is a matter of law that is subject to de novo review on appeal, confirming the continued validity of its en banc decision in Cybor Corp. v. FAS Technologies, Inc., 138 F.3d 1448 (Fed. Cir. 1998).

In an opinion by Judge Newman, the Court relied upon principles of stare decisis, finding that “[a]fter fifteen years of experience with Cybor, we conclude that the court should retain plenary review of claim construction, thereby providing national uniformity, consistency, and finality to the meaning and scope of patent claims.”  The Court said that experience has confirmed that Cybor is an effective implementation of Markman II, and that the criteria for departure from stare decisis are not met.

Foreseeable Equivalents Can Be Infringing Equivalents

In Ring & Pinion Service Inc. v. ARB Corporation LTD., [2013-1238] (February 19, 2013), the Federal Circuit held that foreseeable equivalents could be infringing equivalents.  Through stipulations, the parties set up the question perfectly, agreeing that if a foreseeable equivlent at the time of filng could infringe, the patent was infringed, but if a foreseeable equivalent at the time of infringe could not infringe, the patent was not infringed.  The Federal Circuit affirmed the district court, stating: “There is not, nor has there ever been, a foreseeability limitation on the application of the doctrine of equivalents.”

The Federal Circuit noted that it has long been clear that known interchangeability weighs in favor of finding infringement under the doctrine of equivalents, citing Warner-Jenkinson Co. v. Hilton Davis Chem. Co., 520 U.S. 17, 36 (1997); Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Prods. Co., 339 U.S. 605, 609 (1950); Abraxis Bioscience, Inc. v. Mayne Pharma (USA) Inc., 467 F.3d 1370, 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2006); Interactive Pictures Corp. v. Infinite Pictures, Inc., 274 F.3d 1371, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2001); and Corning Glass Works v. Sumitomo Elec. U.S.A., Inc., 868 F.2d 1251, 1261 (Fed. Cir. 1989), and concluding that “[e]xcluding equivalents that were foreseeable at the time of patenting would directly conflict with these holdings that “known interchangeability” supports infringement under the doctrine of equivalents.

COMMENT: The defendant may have been confused by the foreseeability test of Festo Corp. v. Skoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co., 535 U.S. 722 (2002), which determines the scope of prosecution history estoppel created by a narrowing claim amendment, and thus indirectly the scope of infringing equivlents.  Patent prosecutors can breath easier, but should still strive to write claims broad enough to literally cover foreseeable equivalents.

Interviewing Examiners – The Personal Touch to Prosecution

February 10, 2014, marked the 123rd anniversay of the issuance of U.S. Patent No. 446,054 on the Ouija Board.  As the story is told by descendants of the inventors, the Patent Examiner refused to issue a patent without proof tha the invention worked.

The requested demonstration was made during an Examiner Interview, as dramatically recounted in the Smithsonian in October 2013:

the chief patent officer demanded a demonstration—if the board could accurately  spell out his name, which was supposed to be unknown to Bond and Peters, he’d  allow the patent application to proceed. They all sat down, communed with the  spirits, and the planchette faithfully spelled out the patent officer’s name.  Whether or not it was mystical spirits or the fact that Bond, as a patent  attorney, may have just known the man’s name, well, that’s unclear, Murch says.  But on February 10, 1891, a white-faced and visibly shaken patent officer  awarded Bond a npatent for his new “toy or game.”

Read more:  http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-strange-and-mysterious-history-of-the-ouija-board-5860627/#ixzz2t35YW21m.  What actually happened during the interview is a mystery — a problems with many Examiner Interviews today, despite the provisions of 37 CFR 1.133 and MPEP 716.  We do know that the patent did issue, and that the patent owners used the issuance as an endorsement of the operability of their invention for many years.

It’s What You Claim, Not What You Meant to Claim, That Counts

On February 7, 2014, Magistrate Thynge issued a report and recommendation in  Magnetar Technologies Corp. v Six Flags Theme Parks, Inc., 07-127-LPS-MPT (D.Del) that among other things found Claim 3 of U.S. Patent No. 5,277,125 invalid for indefiniteness.  Claim 3 states:

The problem is that Claim 3 specifies a track, but then calls for magnet assemblies between said tracks.  The inventor testitifed that he knew what it meant:

But it did not say what he meant.  This is reminsecent of Chef America v. Lamb Weston, 358 F.3d 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2004) where the claim “heating to” rather than “heating at” 450° proved fatal to the patent.

There were serveral possible fixes, none of which were made.  Precisely because there were serveral fixes, Magistrate Thynge found that correction would be subject to reasonable debate, so that Court was unable to correct the error under Novo Indus., L.P. v. Micro Molds Corp., 350 F.3d 1348, 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2003).  The Magistrate granted summary judgment that claim 3 of the ‘125 patent is invalid for indefiniteness under 35 U.S.C. § 112, Paragraph ¶2.

Even of the District Court does not adopt this part of the Magistrate’s recommendation, at a minimum the less than precise language of claim 3 wasted time and resources of the patentee.  Words of a patent claim are critical, and everyone connected with the patent is responsible for making sure it is correct.