Mardi Gras 2023

From masks to beads, patents protect a number products for celebrating Mardi Gras, including:

U.S. Patent No. 4,864,663 protects an integral costume mask and display headgears, suitable for Mardi Gras celebrations:

U.S. Patent No. 5,135,390, protects a Flambeau Torch:

U.S. Patent No. 5,219,069 protects a chainable Plastic Coin Holder for collecting Mardi Gras coins:

U.S. Patent No. 5,787,508 protects a Decorative Mask Assembly suitable for Mardi Gras celebrations:

U.S. Patent No. 5,896,756 discloses a Soft Necklace suitable for throwing at Mardi Gras:

U.S. Patent No. 6,296,364 discloses a Lighted Bead Necklace, suitable for wearing at Mardi Gras:

U.S. Patent No. 6,578,981 discloses another version of a Lighted Bead Necklace suitable for wearing at Mardi Gras:

U.S. Patent No. 6,991,141 discloses Methods of Producing and Treating Twisted Beads for Mardi Gra celebrations:

U.S. Patent No. 8,672,169 protects a Novelty Cup with Jewelry for your Mardi Gras libations:

U.S. Patent No. D611117 protects a Mardi Gras Doubloon Fishing Lure:

U.S. Patent No. 8,082,753 protects Beverage Bead for holding your Mardi Gras hurricane:

Presidents Day 2023

U.S. Patent No. 5,288,076 turns presidential election into a game (funny how patents imitate life):

U.S. Patent No. 2536 protects the appearance of an Andrew Jackson medal:

U.S. Patent No. 3274 protects the appearance of a Design for a Clock Case, featuring Abraham Lincoln.

U.S. Patent No. 2983 protects the appearance of a sculpture of Abraham Lincoln and his Council of War:

U.S. Patent No. 6071 protects the appearance of a medal featuring President Grant (and Senator H. Wilson:

U.S. Patent No. 8581 protects the design of a medal featuring a tree with eighteen
branches representing the eighteen administrations, which are indicated by the names of the
Presidents of the United States:

U.S. Patent No. D8593 protects the appearance of a flag with the names of the first eighteen presidents:

U.S. Patent No. 169085 protects a Revolving Game Apparatus, featuring the first eighteen presidents:

U.S. Patent No. D9239 protects the appearance of a badge with the images of George Washington and Ulysses Grant.

U.S. Patent No. 9418 protects the design for a charm, medal, or badge that features the image of Rutherford B. Hayes, and William A. Wheeler:

U.S. Patent No. D9482 protects the design of a shirt with the images of Rutherford B. Hayes and William A, Wheeler.

A Court Can Only Enjoin Public Accusations of Infringement if They Are Objectively Baseless

In Lite-Netics, LLC v. Nu Tsai Capital, LLC, [2023-1146] (February 17, 2023), the Federal Circuit vacated a preliminary injunction against Lite-Netics patent-related speech, holding that the district court abused its discretion.

Lite-Netics brought a patent-infringement action against HBL, and sent two notices,
one before filing suit and one after, to its customers (some of which were also HBL customers), informing them of allegedly infringing competitors in the market and stating Lite-Netics’s intent to enforce its patent rights. HBL counterclaimed for several state-law torts, and moved for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction, based on two of the state law counterclaims, which the district court granted.

Lite-Netics owns multiple patents on magnetic holiday string lights. HBL, a former customer of Lite-Netics, also sells holiday string lights.

Lite-Netics owns multiple patents on magnetic holiday string lights. HBL, a former customer of Lite-Netics, also sells holiday string lights. Lite-Netics send a notice to the trade that Lite-Netics’s magnetic string lights were protected by U.S. Patent Nos. 7,549,779 and 8,128,264; that other companies were attempting to “copy” Lite-Netics’s patented products; that Lite-Netics had filed a patent infringement lawsuit against HBL to stop it from making and selling infringing products; and that Lite-Netics was also considering including any known company using or reselling the HBL products as co-defendants in this lawsuit.

The district court addressed (1) the likelihood of HBL’s success on the merits of its tortious-interference and defamation claims; (2) the likelihood of irreparable injury
to HBL without the injunction; (3) the balance of equities; and (4) the public interest.

In considering the first factor, the court recognized that state-law tort claims based on the communication of patent rights, such as HBL’s tortious-interference and defamation claims, “are preempted by federal patent laws, unless the claimant can show that the patent holder acted in bad faith.” However the district court concluded that HBL’s state-law tort claims were not preempted here, centrally because it held that Lite-Netics’s infringement allegations were so clearly meritless that their assertion was in bad faith. On that basis, the court ruled that HBL would likely succeed on its tortious-interference and defamation claims
and that the preliminary injunction should issue, because the non-merits preliminary-injunction considerations favored issuance.

The Federal Circuit has held that federal patent law preempts state law tort liability for a patentholder’s good faith conduct in communications asserting infringement of its patent and
warning about potential litigation. Thus, the Federal Circuit said that HBL’s state-law claims
here thus can survive federal preemption only to the extent that those claims are based on a showing of ‘bad faith’ action in asserting infringement. The requirement of a showing of bad faith as prerequisite to applying state tort law to speech about infringement rests partly on First Amendment principles. Thus, a bad faith standard cannot be satisfied in the absence of a showing that the claims asserted were objectively baseless, and a patent-infringement allegation is objectively baseless only if no reasonable litigant could realistically expect
success on the merits.

Lite-Netics argued on appeal that the district court erred in finding its infringement allegations concerning the ’779 patent, and its application to both accused products, to be objectively baseless, and the Federal Circuit agreed. Because there was an objectively reasonable basis for many of Lite-Netics’s infringement allegations, the district court abused its discretion in finding that Lite-Netics could not have “realistically expect[ed] success on the merits” and, therefore, acted in bad faith.

The Federal Circuit noted that the preliminary injunction was to a large extent based on three legal conclusions with respect to Lite-Netics’s assertion of the ’779 patent, but concluded that Lite-Netics’s position on all three of those disputes has not been shown, at this stage of the litigation, namely before full claim-construction proceedings or possible expert reports on infringement), to be objectively baseless. That conclusion requires vacatur of the preliminary injunction, without finally resolving the underlying disputes about claim construction, prosecution history estoppel, or other issues.

Storing and Displaying Video is an Abstract Idea

In Hawk Technology Systems, LLC v. Castle Retail, LLC, [2022-1222] (February 17, 2022), the Federal Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the suit because the asserted patent claims of U.S. Patent No. 10,499,091 on a method of viewing multiple simultaneously displayed and
stored video images on a remote viewing device of a video surveillance system were directed to ineligible subject matter and therefore invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 101.

The district court concluded that the ’091 patent claims were directed to the abstract idea of “storing and displaying video,” and the Federal Circuit agreed, noting that the claims are similar to those it has found to be directed to abstract ideas. The Court noted that in Adaptive Streaming Inc. v. Netflix, Inc., 836 F. App’x 900, 903 (Fed. Cir. 2020), it held that “encoding and decoding image data and . . . converting formats, including when data is received from one medium and sent along through another, are by themselves abstract
ideas.”

While Hawk characterized its invention as a solution to a technical problem in multi-format digital video product systems, the Federal Circuit pointed out that even a specification full of technical details about a physical invention may nonetheless conclude with claims that claim
nothing more than the broad law or abstract idea underlying the claims. The claims fail to recite a specific solution to make the alleged improvement— conserving bandwidth while preserving quality—“concrete” and at most recite abstract data manipulation.

At Alice step two, the Federal Circuit said that the district court found that the claims, “read in light of the specification, do not show a technological improvement in video storage and display because the limitations can be implemented using generic computer elements,” and that the “specification and claims do not explain or show how the monitoring and storage is improved, except by using already existing computer and camera technology,” and thus the claims failed at Alice step two. The Federal Circuit agreed.

Again, Hawk argued that the claims recite an inventive solution, but the Federal Circuit said that even if the claims achieved the purported solution, they only use generic functional language to do so and require nothing other than conventional computer and network components operating according to their ordinary functions. The Federal Circuit said that it recognize that the claims include “parameters,” but the claims fail to specify precisely what the parameters are and the parameters at most concern abstract data manipulation image formatting and compression.

The Federal Circuit therefore found that the ’091 patent claims fail to transform the abstract idea into something more and thus fail Alice step two. The Court that held that the ’091 patent is patent ineligible because its claims are directed to an abstract idea and fail to
transform that abstract idea into patent-eligible subject matter.

Posted in 101

Functional Medical Device Demonstrated at Trade Show Trigged On Sale Bar of pre-AIA 102(b)

In Minerva Surgical, Inc. v. Hologic, Inc., [2021-2246] (February 15, 2023), the Federal Circuit affirmed summary judgment that the asserted claims of U.S. Patent No. 9,186,208 on surgical devices for a procedure called endometrial ablation were anticipated under the public use bar of pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. § 102(b).

The Federal Circuit first pointed out that the patented technology was “in public use” because, before the critical date, Minerva disclosed fifteen devices having the technology at AAAGL 2009, an industry related event dubbed “the Super Bowl of [the] industry” by one of the inventors. Minerva’s disclosure of these devices spanned several days and included Minerva showcasing them at a booth, in meetings with interested parties, and in a technical presentation, and a brochure. Minerva did not disclose the devices under any confidentiality obligations, despite the commercial nature of the event. The Federal Circuit said that an invention is in public use if it is shown to or used by an individual other than the inventor under no limitation, restriction, or obligation of confidentiality.

The Federal Circuit then pointed out that at the time of the public use, the technology
was “ready for patenting.” Specifically, Minerva had created working prototypes and enabling technical documents describing the claimed technology. The Federal Circuit said that “ready for patenting can be shown in at least two ways: (1) a reduction to practice before the critical date; (2) or proof that before the critical date the inventor had prepared drawings or other descriptions of the invention sufficiently specific to enable a person or ordinary skill in the art to practice the invention.

Minerva raised three reasons why the invention was not in public use at the AAGL 2009″ First, Minerva argued that it “merely displayed” the device. The Federal Circuit rejected this, noting that the device was actually demonstrated with a transparent uterine model. The Federal Circuit distinguished Motionless Keyboard relied upon by Minerva, because that case involved a visual view of the device without any disclosure of the claimed technology,and finding that Minerva’s disclosure went “well beyond” the disclosure in Motionless Keyboard. Second, Minerva argued that there was no disclosure of the claimed invention. The Federal Circuit rejected the contention that the public had to actually handle the device, saying that all is required is that the public understood the invention, and the feedback collected from the AAGL 2009 showed that Minerva allowed knowledgeable individuals to scrutinize the invention enough to recognize and understand the technology Minerva later sought to patent. Third, Minerva argued that the invention was not “ready for patenting” because Minerva was still making improvements. The Federal Circuit rejected this for two reasons: (1) Minerva reduced the invention to practice and (2) Minerva had enabling documentation describing the invention.

The Federal Circuit then concluded that district court thus correctly granted summary judgment of invalidity because there are no genuine factual disputes, and defendants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law that the asserted claims are anticipated under
the public use bar of § 102(b).

Happy Valentine’s Day 2023 – Ten Patents to Set the Mood

The U.S. patent collection has patents for every occasion, and Valentine’s Day is no exception. Here are ten patents to set mood for the day:

U.S. Patent No. 1,248,916 provides a paper decoration for your festivities.
U.S. Patent No. 1,353,709 provides a heart-shaped token (and a corny poem).

U.S. Patent No. 2,101,592 provides a novelty display, adaptable to many occasions, including Valentine’s Day.
U.S. Patent No. PP 645 provides a carnation that the invention claims is particularly adapted for Valentine’s Day
U.S. Patent No. 2,726,397 provides an apron with a replaceable applique, including one perfect for Valentine’s Day.
U.S. Patent No. 3,016,178 provides the definitive box for Valentine’s Day treats.
U.S. Patent No. 3,139,231 provides a symbolic tear string envelope or package, perfect for that sentimental Valentine’s Day card.
U.S> Patent No. 3,610,510 provides a plastic heart shaped box perfect for that Valentine’s Day gift.
U.S. Patent No. 5,035,391 provides a heart shaped balloon anchor for your lighter-than air Valentine’s Day gift.
U.S. Patent No. 5,561,928 provides a collapsible greeting display perfect for Valentine’s Day.

The Canons of Claim Construction Showed that the District Court was Half Right and Half Wrong

In SSI Technologies, LLC v, Dongguan Zhengyang Electronic Mechanical Ltd., [2021-2345, 2022-1039] (February 13, 2023) the Federal Circuit affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded the district court’s grant of summary judgment to DZEM on SSI’s infringement
claims, dismissal of DZEM’s invalidity counterclaims, and granted summary judgment to SSI on the tortious interference counterclaim.

SSI has asserted U.S. Patent Nos. 8,733,153 and 9,535,038, generally directed to sensors for determining the characteristics of fluid in a container, such as a fuel tank.against DZEM. this case.

The dispute in the district court regarding the ’153 patent turned mainly on the limitation in claim 1 that recites a controller configured to determine whether a contaminant exists in the
fluid based on the temperature of the fluid, a time period from when the sound wave is produced to when the echo is detected, and at least one of the group of a) whether a measured volume is out of range and b) a dilution of the fluid is detected while the measured volume of the fluid decreases. The district court construed the second item of the Markush group in that limitation, “a dilution of the fluid is detected while the measured volume of the fluid decreases,” to require that the contaminant determination actually consider the measured volume of the fluid. This construction was based upon the district court’s determination that amendments to the claim during prosecution was designed to incorporate the error-detection capability recited in the specification.

The Federal Circuit agreed with the district court, noting that the language “measured volume” in the claim requires that the volume of the liquid in the tank must be determined and considered as part of the contamination analysis recited in claim 1. The Court pointed out that a claim construction that gives meaning to all the terms of the claim is preferred over
one that does not do so. Thus the Federal Circuit affirmed summary judgment of non-infringement as to the ‘153 patent.

With respect to the ’038 patent, the dispute in the district court turned mainly on the district court’s construction of the term “filter” and its application of that construction in its infringement analysis. The district court adopted DZEM’s proposed construction of “filter,”
construing the term to mean “a porous structure defining openings, and configured to remove impurities larger than said openings from a liquid or gas passing through the
structure.” Since the DZEM device had a non-porous cover, the court found no infringement.

The Federal Circuit disagreed with the district court construction of filter. The Court said that the specification of the ’038 patent contains no requirement regarding the size of the filter openings. The Federal Circuit conceded that each embodiment disclosed in the ’038 patent contains a mesh filter, which has very small openings, but stated that the scope of a claim is not ordinarily limited to preferred embodiments or specific examples in the specification. The Court said that while the specific embodiments of the filters disclosed in the ’038 patent specification contain small holes, the general references to a “filter” in the specification are quite broad and do not reflect an intent to limit the term “filter” to the disclosed embodiments. In particular the reference to use of the mesh was limited to “some embodiments.” The Federal Circuit concluded that as long as the openings in the filter are small enough to prevent at least some gas bubbles from entering the sensing area, the openings need
not be smaller than any particular maximum size.

In light of this construction, the Federal Circuit vacated the grant of summary judgment of the ‘038 patent in its entirety, and remanded for further proceedings.

On the grant of summary judgment to SSI on DZEM’s tortious interference
counterclaim, the Federal Circuit said that in order to assert a claim “that a patent
holder has engaged in wrongful conduct by asserting claims of patent infringement,” the plaintiff “must establish that the claims of infringement were objectively baseless.” The Federal Circuit said that the district court held that SSI’s infringement claims were not objectively baseless, and that it discerned no error in that conclusion, pointing to SSI’s expert report regarding infringement as evidence that the suit was not objectively baseless. The Court said that the existence of an expert opinion can be evidence that a party’s position is not unreasonable, even if there is conflicting expert testimony in the record. DZEM was required to establish by clear and convincing evidence that SSI’s infringement suit was objectively baseless, but it failed to introduce any evidence of objective baselessness. Thus, the Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s grant of summary
judgment to SSI on the tortious interference counterclaim.

Isolating Naturally Occurring Nicotinamide Riboside Did Not Make the Composition Patentable

In Chromadex, Inc. v. Elysium Health, Inc., [2022-1116] (February 13, 2023), the Federal Circuit affirmed the grant of summary judgment that the asserted claims of U.S. Patent No. 8,197,807 on dietary supplements containing isolated nicotinamide riboside are directed to unpatentable subject matter.

The district court construed several claim terms including “isolated nicotinamide riboside” to mean “nicotinamide riboside that is separated or substantially free from at least some other components associated with the source of nicotinamide riboside.” The district court concluded that the claims were directed to a natural phenomenon, namely, “compositions
comprising isolated nicotinamide riboside, a naturally occurring vitamin present in cow milk.”

The only difference between at least one embodiment within the scope of the claim and natural milk is that the NR in the former is isolated. The asserted claims do not have characteristics markedly different from milk. Both the claimed compositions and milk “increase NAD+ biosynthesis upon oral administration.

The Federal Circuit noted that the claims cover several different composition embodiments, some of which are structurally different from milk. However, the claims also encompass—as both parties agree—at least one embodiment that covers milk, except that the NR element is “isolated.” Because the claims are broad enough to encompass a product of nature, it is invalid under § 101.

Chromadex argud that the claims, in fact, possess markedly different characteristics that render them patent-eligible. Chromadex bases this argument on two main points: (1) “NR is found in milk in only trace amounts,” i.e., one part per million; and (2) “what little NR is found in milk is not bioavailable” because it is bound to the lactalbumin whey protein. However, the Federal Circuit found this argument unpersuasive first because the claims do not require that the NR, specifically, increase NAD+, and milk increases NAD+ biosynthesis (albeit because it contains tryptophan rather than because of the trace amounts of NR), but that is the only therapeutic effect that the claims require. Second, the claims simply do not reflect the distinctions Chromadex relied upon: they do not require any specific quantity of isolated NR, and the district court’s construction for “isolated [NR],” which Appellants do not challenge on appeal, does not require that the NR be separated from the lactalbumin whey protein but only from “some of the other components associated with the source of [NR].”

The Federal Circuit said that the act of isolating the NR by itself, no matter how difficult or brilliant it may have been (although the specification makes clear that it was conventional), similarly does not turn an otherwise patent-ineligible product of nature into a patentable invention.

Posted in 101

Statute 2 Desperate Patent Owner 0

CyWee Group Ltd. v. Google LLC, [2020-1565, 2020-1567] (February 8, 2023), the Federal Circuit affirmed the USPTO’s Director’s decision not to rehear two Final Written Decision determining that all of the challenged claims in CyWee’s patents were unpatentable.

CyWee also argued that the Board’s institution decisions and final written decisions were untimely. According to CyWee, it was not enough that the Board instituted the IPRs within the statutorily required three months of receiving CyWee’s preliminary responses. Nor was it enough that the Board issued its final written decisions within the time the statute contemplates (i.e., one year from institution, plus in this case an additional one month due to joinder). CyWee argued that not only must the Director be able to review institution decisions and final written decisions, she also must perform (or have the opportunity to perform) such a review within the statutory deadlines applicable to those decisions.

The Federal Circuit made short work of finding CyWee’s arguments “meritless,” noting that the statutory provisions setting specific deadlines for institution decisions and final written decisions say nothing of deadlines for any further Director review of those decisions. The Federal Circuit said that the Director properly delegated authority to institute proceedings to the Board, and said that if the Board makes that determination within the § 314(b) deadline and here (as it did) —the institution decision is timely, notwithstanding the possibility that the Director may later revisit that decision.

Similarly, with respect to the final written decision, Director properly delegated authority to the Board to extend the one year deadline for a Final Written Decision in the case of joinder. The Federal Circuit said that delegation to the Board of the authority to decide on institution without a mechanism for parties to subsequently request Director review does not present Appointments Clause problems.

PMC Patent is Unenforceable Because an Applicant Must Prosecute its Applications in an Equitable Way, Even Though the USPTO Doesn’t

Ini Personalized Media Communications, LLC v. Apple Inc., [2021-2275] (January 20, 2023), the Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s determination that U.S. Patent No. 8,191,091 was unenforceable based on prosecution laches.

The district court determined that Personalized Media Communications successfully employed an inequitable scheme to extend its patent rights. Relying on the Federal Circuit’s decision in Hyatt, the court determined that laches required a challenger to prove that the applicant’s delay was unreasonable and inexcusable under the totality of the circumstances
and that there was prejudice attributable to the delay. Under this framework, the court found that PMC engaged in an unreasonable and unexplained delay amounting to an egregious
abuse of the statutory patent system.

The Court found that similar to Hyatt, PMC’s applications were atypically long and complex, containing over 500 pages of text and over 22 pages of figures. PMC filed each of its applications with a single claim, then subsequently amended the claims, sometimes to recite identical language across different applications. The court further explained that, like in Hyatt, over time, PMC greatly increased the total number of claims in the range of
6,000 to 20,000 claims. The court also found the length of the delay similar to
Hyatt because PMC waited eight to fourteen years to file its patent applications and at least sixteen years to present the asserted claims for examination.

The court reasoned that PMC’s prosecution conduct made it virtually impossible for the PTO to conduct double patenting, priority, or written description analyses. In addition to the scope and nature of PMC’s applications, the court pointed to PMC’s vast prior art disclosure, which
included references having little-to-no relevance, and examiners’ statements in office actions describing PMC’s prosecution strategy and conduct as improper. Regardless, prosecution had been pending for “nearly ten years” before the PTO suspended it.

The only notable distinction the court found between Hyatt and this case was that while Hyatt acknowledged he lacked a master plan for demarcating his applications, PMC developed the “Consolidation Agreement” with the PTO, under which PMC agreed to group its applications into 56 subject-matter categories, with subcategories for each of the two priority dates. The court determined that the Consolidation Agreement alone does not operate to shift blame on the PTO, explaining that the Consolidation Agreement had to be understood in the context of PMC’s business-driven, unreasonable prosecution strategy.

The court analyzed prosecution conduct concerning the asserted ’091 patent and found that PMC used the Consolidation Agreement to realize PMC’s initial strategy of serialized prosecution, notwithstanding the GATT amendments. Thus, the court found that Apple met its burden to prove the first element of laches.

The court reasoned that the prosecution delays had to be understood in the context of PMC’s expressed desire to extend its patent rights as long as possible and conceal its inventions until infringement was deeply embedded into the industry. This scheme contributed to the prejudice, which was underscored by the fact that a jury found that Apple’s FairPlay technology infringed the ’091 patent. Thus, Apple established prejudice, and laches rendered the ’091 patent unenforceable.

On appeal, PMC first argued legal error because its conduct looks nothing like Hyatt or the handful of other cases that have found prosecution laches. The Federal Circuit found that this was not a legal error and is factually incorrect. PMC nest asserts that its “compliance” with the Consolidation Agreement and the PTO’s rules precludes a finding of laches as a matter of law. The Federal Circuit disagreed. Third, PMC asserted that the district court improperly disregarded the reasons for the prosecution’s length. PMC points to delays in prosecution that occurred due to the PTO grappling with PMC’s GATTBubble
applications and attempting to resolve overlapping issues across many of PMC’s applications. The Federal Circuit rejected this as well, pointing out that “a delay by the PTO cannot excuse the appellant’s own delay.”

Fourth, PMC argued that the district court committed legal error by relying on the simple number of PMC’s applications. This argument also failed, the Federal Circuit saying that the district court here did not legally err by considering that PMC filed 328 GATT-Bubble applications as a part of the court’s analysis, which also properly considered
other relevant facts.

Fifth, PMC argued that it was a legal error for the district court to find delay due to PMC adding “narrowing” limitations directed to encryption and decryption in 2003, years after the priority date of the ’091 patent. In light of the significant amendments made in 2003, we
are not persuaded that the district court erred in concluding that PMC unreasonably delayed in presenting the encryption and decryption subject matter.

The Federal Circuit said that in sum, the district court did not legally err. The district
court correctly considered the totality of the circumstances and did not disregard or ignore relevant facts.