Patent Law. Prof. Roger Ford Monday, April 6, 2015 Class 20 Infringement II: the doctrine of equivalents; indirect infringement.

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Patent Law Prof. Roger Ford Monday, April 6, 2015 Class 20 Infringement II: the doctrine of equivalents; indirect infringement Recap

Class 18 Recap Laws of nature Abstract ideas A unified framework Class 19 Claim construction Literal infringement Today s agenda

Today s agenda Infringement by equivalents Secondary liability Infringement by equivalents

Infringement by equivalents There will be products that don t meet all the limitations of the claim, but are very close Maybe due to strategic behavior (ph = 3.95 when the claim requires 4 6) Maybe due to unforeseeable technology (Velcro instead of mechanical fastener) Infringement by equivalents fills that gap Infringement by equivalents Similar role to obviousness Obviousness fills in the gap when anticipation doesn t work, but the prior art is very close Equivalents fills in the gap when literal infringement doesn t work, but the accused product is very close

Infringement by equivalents Preview: the basic rules You still have to show infringement of every element or limitation (the allelements rule) Infringement by equivalents Preview: the basic rules First main question: does the defendant s product satisfy the function/way/result test? Does the accused structure or step perform substantially the same function, in substantially the same way, to achieve substantially the same result?

Infringement by equivalents Preview: the basic rules Second main question: is there a legal reason to limit the doctrine of equivalents? Four common legal reasons: prosecution history estoppel; the disclosure-dedication rule; the alllimitations rule; argument-based estoppel Winans v. Denmead (1854) Tech: rail car to carry coal with conical design

Winans v. Denmead (1854) Accused product: inward-sloping section was eight-sided instead of being conical Winans v. Denmead (1854) Function/way/result test? Function? Way? Result?

Festo v. SKKK This doctrine arises out of the fact that prosecution is a negotiation What are an applicant s options when an examiner rejects a claim? Festo v. SKKK This doctrine arises out of the fact that prosecution is a negotiation What are an applicant s options when an examiner rejects a claim? Argue Amend Appeal Abandon

Festo v. SKKK This doctrine arises out of the fact that prosecution is a negotiation What are an applicant s options when an examiner rejects a claim? Argue claim construction Amend prosecution history estoppel Appeal Abandon Festo v. SKKK Two amendments: Two sealing rings, each with a lip on one side to hold out impurities Magnetizable sleeve

Festo v. SKKK Two sealing rings, with one lip each Accused product: one sealing ring, with lips on both sides Function? Way? Result? Festo v. SKKK Magnetizable sleeve Accused product: non-magnetizable sleeve Function? Way? Result?

Festo v. SKKK Two legal questions Should the doctrine of equivalents apply to amendments for reasons other than prior art? What is the scope of the doctrine of equivalents is it a complete bar or a flexible bar? Festo v. SKKK Finally, prosecution history estoppel What s the principle? If you originally claimed something broad, but then narrowed it to get a patent, you can t go back and get the broader thing through equivalents The examiner thought there was something wrong with the original claim It s an end run around examination

Festo v. SKKK Finally, prosecution history estoppel What s the principle? If you originally claimed something broad, but then narrowed it to get a patent, you can t go back and get the broader thing through equivalents The examiner thought there was something wrong with the original claim It s an end run around examination Festo v. SKKK Finally, prosecution history estoppel What s the principle? And this has little to do with the reason for the narrowing Prior art Written description/enablement Any other reason that relates to patentability

Festo v. SKKK Flexible bar versus complete bar Argument for a complete bar? Festo v. SKKK Flexible bar versus complete bar Argument for a complete bar? Administrability the flexible-bar rule was unpredictable and promoted uncertainty

Festo v. SKKK Flexible bar versus complete bar Argument for a flexible bar? Festo v. SKKK Flexible bar versus complete bar Argument for a flexible bar? The prosecution history can tell us what a patent doesn t mean, not what it does mean Just because you ve surrendered some claim scope doesn t mean that you re suddenly capable of writing the perfect claim

Festo v. SKKK New rule: to get equivalents, even after a claim was narrowed during prosecution, you have to show: that the equivalent was unforeseeable; or that the reason for the amendment was tangential to the equivalent you re trying to capture; or some other reason Festo v. SKKK New rule: to get equivalents, even after a claim was narrowed during prosecution, you have to show: that the equivalent was unforeseeable; or that the reason for the amendment was tangential to the equivalent you re trying to capture; or some other reason

Festo v. SKKK Unforseeable technology mechanical fastener Velcro Wright brothers wing warping wing flaps or ailerons Festo v. SKKK Tangential: Primos, Inc. v. Hunter s Specialties Claim: required a plate Amendment: added differentially spaced limitation Accused product: used a dome instead of a plate Court: the amendment had nothing to do with the plate, so it was tangential

Infringement by equivalents Preview: the basic rules Second main question: is there a legal reason to limit the doctrine of equivalents? Four common legal reasons: prosecution history estoppel; the disclosure-dedication rule; the alllimitations rule; argument-based estoppel Infringement by equivalents Disclosure-dedication rule Another form of prosecution-history estoppel Johnson & Johnston: claim required sheet of aluminum Specification: one could also use other metals, such as stainless steel or nickel alloys Court: the patentee had disclosed and dedicated non-aluminum metals to the public

Infringement by equivalents All-limitations rule The doctrine of equivalents cannot apply if it would vitiate an entire claim limitation Freedman Seating v. American Seating: a rotatably mounted seat cannot be the equivalent of a slidably mounted seat Asyst v. Emtrak: an unmounted part cannot be the equivalent of a mounted part Novartis v. Abbott Labs: a surfactant cannot be the equivalent of a nonsurfact. Infringement by equivalents Argument-based estoppel An applicant who surrenders claim scope in argument before the examiner cannot regain that scope PODS v. Porta Stor: Applicant argued (to overcome a prior-art rejection) As the Examiner acknowledges, the Dousset reference clearly lacks the teachings of the singular rectangular-shaped frame. Court: PODS cannot get a non-rectangular frame through the doctrine of equivalents

Secondary liability 35 U.S.C. 271 Infringement of Patent (post-aia) * * * (b) Whoever actively induces infringement of a patent shall be liable as an infringer. (c) Whoever offers to sell or sells within the United States or imports into the United States a component of a patented machine, manufacture, combination or composition, or a material or apparatus for use in practicing a patented process, constituting a material part of the invention, knowing the same to be especially made or especially adapted for use in an infringement of such patent, and not a staple article or commodity of commerce suitable for substantial noninfringing use, shall be liable as a contributory infringer. * * *

Wallace v. Holmes (1871) Tech: a new burner for an oil lamp Claim: a new oil lamp with new burner AND standard fuel reservoir, wick tube, chimney Accused product: new oil lamp minus the chimney Court: this is palpable interference with the patent rights Wallace v. Holmes (1871) How could the patentee have prevented this problem? Just claim the novel burner separately Today: this totally works In 1871: not allowed

Wallace v. Holmes (1871) Now codified in 271(c): Offering/selling/importing a component of a patented invention Knowing it to be especially made for infringement Not a staple article of commerce Aro Manufacturing Tech: convertible tops for cars Aro: makes replacement fabric parts for when the original wears out

Aro Manufacturing Tops are specially made for GM and Ford GM is licensed Previous Supreme Court decision (Aro I): replacing top is repair, not reconstruction, so doesn t need a separate license So only Ford parts are at issue here Aro Manufacturing Does Ford infringe? Do Ford owners infringe? Does repairing Fords infringe? Does Aro directly infringe?

Aro Manufacturing Court: Aro is supplying a part especially made or adapted for use in the infringing product No other use So not a staple article of commerce Bolts, screws, &c Aro Manufacturing Also: has to have knowledge of: That the product it s making is especially suited for putting into Ford cars That a patent covers the convertible top That the use by Ford is unlicensed Here: Aro had that knowledge because the patent owner had sent it a letter

Aro Manufacturing Is this a sensible rule? If you make repair parts, how will you behave in light of this rule? Aro Manufacturing Is this a sensible rule? If you make repair parts, how will you behave in light of this rule? Bury your head in the sand This means patent holders have a lot of pressure to track down infringers Who has lower search costs?

Global-Tech v. SEB 271(b): whoever actively induces infringement Question: what mental state is required? Actual knowledge Willful blindness Recklessness Deliberate disregard of a known risk Should have known Negligence Strict liability Global-Tech v. SEB Federal Circuit: Deliberate disregard of a known risk is sufficient Supreme Court: No, actual knowledge is required However: Willful blindness is a form of actual knowledge Requires: subjective belief that there is a high probability of a patent, and deliberate action to avoid learning about it

Global-Tech v. SEB What was the inducement? Here: encouraging others to sell infringing deep fryers In general: actively and knowingly aiding and abetting Secondary liability Contributory infringement: Sale of an article, with knowledge, that is not a staple article of commerce Induced infringement: Aiding and abetting, with knowledge Possibly active encouragement After Global-Tech, the line between the two is very fine

Secondary liability Follow-up question: Can you be liable for inducement if you believe the patent is invalid or not infringed? Global-Tech: [W]e now hold that induced infringement requires knowledge that the induced acts constitute patent infringement. Invalidity:??? Secondary liability Commil USA v. Cisco Systems: Argued in the Supreme Court last week Question: Is a good-faith belief that a patent is invalid enough to defeat inducement liability? U.S. government: No; and Global-Tech should be narrowly construed Court: likely to say yes

Next time Next time Remedies: injunctions