Justia Intellectual Property Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
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Lifetime’s patent describes a two-part seal for use in a mobile living quarters (recreational vehicle) with a slide-out room. A slide-out room is formed by extending a portion of the side wall of the RV outward to create extra interior space. The Federal Circuit reversed dismissal of Lifetime’s infringement suit against Trim-Lok. Lifetime adequately alleged that Trim-Lok directly infringed. Commercial manufacture is not the only way that a combination can infringe. Although Lifetime did not allege that Trim-Lok made the RV onto which it installed the seal, Lifetime did allege that that an agent of Trim-Lok installed the seal onto the RV, and that the resulting seal-RV combination infringed the patent. Lifetime also plausibly alleged that Trim-Lok induced infringement; it adequately pleaded that Trim-Lok had knowledge of the patent before the allegedly infringing act and that Trim-Lok had the intent to infringe. View "Lifetime Industries, Inc. v. Trim-Lok, Inc." on Justia Law

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Kraft’s patent, issued in 2005, describes a combination of two known kinds of packaging. One, common for cookies, uses a frame surrounded by a wrapper. The other, common for wet wipes, uses a package on which the label may be pulled back to access the contents, then put back in place to reseal the package to preserve the items remaining inside. In Kraft’s infringement suit against Kellogg, the district court entered summary judgment of invalidity for obviousness, 35 U.S.C. 103, but rejected Kellogg’s counterclaim of unenforceability of the patent due to alleged inequitable conduct by Kraft, chiefly in an ex parte reexamination proceeding. The Federal Circuit affirmed, finding no error in the sequence of steps the district court took in arriving at its ultimate obviousness determination and upholding the court’s conclusion that any reasonable jury would have to find a motivation to combine. Kellogg’s evidence was insufficient to permit a finding of the intent required for inequitable conduct based on Kraft’s reexamination arguments. View "Intercontinental Great Brands, LLC v. Kellogg North America Co." on Justia Law

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SynQor owns several patents directed to a particular architecture for direct current-to-direct current (DC-DC) power converters. Vicor requested, and the Patent and Trademark Office granted, inter partes reexaminations of the SynQor Patents. The Patent Trial and Appeal Board concluded that certain claims were patentable over prior art combinations proposed by Vicor but that that certain claims in another patent were unpatentable as anticipated or obvious. In a consolidated appeal, the Federal Circuit affirmed in part and vacated in part, finding that, despite sharing a common panel and having opinions issued on the same date, the decisions in the respective reexaminations contained inconsistent findings on identical issues and on essentially the same record. The conflicting findings were unsupported by any rational explanation in either of the Board’s decisions. View "Vicor Corp. v. SynQor, Inc." on Justia Law

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Ultratec sued CaptionCall for infringement of patents concerning systems for assisting deaf or hard-of-hearing users to make phone calls and won damages of $44.1 million. CaptionCall had filed petitions for inter partes reviews (IPRs). The court stayed post-judgment proceedings pending resolution of the IPRs. CaptionCall retained the same invalidity expert (Occhiogrosso) in the litigation and the IPRs. Ultratec sought to introduce the trial testimony into the IPRs, alleging that Occhiogrosso’s trial testimony conflicted with written declarations he made in the IPRs. Because Ultratec had not first requested authorization to file the motion, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board expunged the motion from the record. Board regulations require that a party seeking to introduce supplemental evidence more than one month after institution first request authorization to file a motion to submit the evidence. The Board held that all challenged claims in the Ultratec patents were either anticipated or would have been obvious in light of prior art references, citing Occhiogrosso’s testimony more than 30 times. The Federal Circuit vacated. The Board failed to consider material evidence and failed to explain its decisions to exclude the evidence to exclude Occhiogrosso’s trial testimony. View "Ultratec, Inc. v. CaptionCall, LLC" on Justia Law

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Return Mail’s patent is directed to processing mail items that are undeliverable due to an inaccurate or obsolete address, using scannable bar codes. Ex parte reexamination resulted in the cancellation of all original claims and the issuance of new claims in 2011. After trying unsuccessfully to license the patent to the Postal Service, Return filed suit under 28 U.S.C. 1498(a), alleging infringement. The Postal Service sought covered business method (CBM ) review, asserting patent-ineligible subject matter, 35 U.S.C. 101 and anticipation, sections 102 and 103. Return raised patentability arguments and contested the Postal Service’s ability under the America Invents Act (AIA), 125 Stat. 284, to petition for CBM review. The Board held that the Postal Service had statutory “standing,” instituted review, and held that the challenged claims were drawn to ineligible subject matter. The Federal CIrcuit affirmed, first agreeing that the Postal Service has standing. While there are differences between section 1498(a) suits against the government and suits for infringement against private parties, those differences are insufficient to exclude a government-related defendant under section 1498(a) from seeking CBM review. The claims at issue simply recite existing business practices with the benefit of generic computing technology, which is not sufficient to impart patent eligibility. View "Return Mail, Inc. v. United States Postal Service" on Justia Law

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Stepan’s application is directed to herbicidal formulations containing glyphosate salt with a surfactant system. Surfactants can enhance glyphosate’s effectiveness as an herbicide by providing better leaf-adherence, enhancing penetration; the "invention is based on the unexpected discovery that surfactant systems comprising dialkoxylated alkylamine, water miscible solubilizer and amine oxide allow for formulation of ultra-high loaded (‘high-strength’) glyphosate salt concentrates possessing high or no cloud points” (the temperature at which a solution becomes cloudy due to the surfactants becoming insoluble and separating into layers). Cloudiness can be avoided if the cloud point is higher than the solution’s temperature or if the solution is cooled before adding the surfactant. The specification explains that because glyphosate salt is created at about 75ºC, it is advantageous to formulate glyphosate with a surfactant system exhibiting a high cloud point to “obviate the necessity of waiting for the temperature of the glyphosate salt reaction product to cool.” Surfactant systems with high or no cloud points allow for quicker formulation of glyphosate concentrates and quicker delivery to the market. The Federal Circuit vacated the rejection of 31 claims on grounds of obviousness. The Board failed to adequately articulate its reasoning, erroneously rejected relevant evidence of nonobviousness, and improperly shifted to Stepan the burden of proving patentability. View "In re: Stepan Co." on Justia Law

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Nidec’s patent is directed to low-noise heating, ventilating, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems and includes a permanent magnet electric motor that turns a fan to move air through ductwork. An improved motor controller performs sinewave commutation instead of more conventional square-wave commutation. Commutation is the repeated sequencing of electrical currents applied to windings within the permanent magnet motor that causes the motor to rotate. Square-wave commutation involves abrupt changes in the voltage applied to a given winding as the sequence progresses, similar to repeatedly flipping a switch. Sinewave commutation involves more gradual and continuous oscillations in applied voltage, similar to sliding a dimmer switch between those states, resulting in less vibration and noise. The Patent Trial and Appeal Board conducted inter partes review. The Federal Circuit affirmed its determination that several claims are invalid as obvious over a combination of prior references, 35 U.S.C. 103. And that all of the challenged claims are unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. 102. View "Nidec Motor Corp. v. Zhongshan Broad Ocean Motor Co., Ltd." on Justia Law

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Georgetown’s patent relates to a system for inspecting the steel tie plates that connect rail tracks to wooden ties, using digital technology. Georgetown's Aurora System uses lasers and cameras mounted on a vehicle to collect and process information about track ties to allow customers to “manage the logistics of crosstie replacement.” Holland purchases track and crosstie measuring technologies from Rail Vision and places those technologies on its own track inspection "TrackStar" vehicles. Data from the track is sent to third-parties for processing. Rail Vision sends finished reports to Holland for distribution to Holland’s customers. Holland and Georgetown knew of each other’s place in the track-tie market. The companies participated in a “head-to-head challenge,” and demonstrated their services to potential customer Union Pacific. Following the demonstrations, Union Pacific and Holland agreed to alter an existing contract to allow Holland to provide Rail Vision Systems technology to Union Pacific. Georgetown sued Holland for infringement and was granted a preliminary injunction, ending Holland’s potential sales to Union Pacific. A jury found that Holland willfully infringed Georgetown's patent and awarded $1,541,333 in damages. The court awarded Georgetown an additional $1,000,000 in enhanced damages based on a finding of willful infringement, 35 U.S.C. 284. The Federal Circuit affirmed. Substantial evidence supports a finding that subjective recklessness led to willful infringement in this case. View "Georgetown Rail Equipment Co. v. Holland L.P." on Justia Law

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Visual’s 740 patent purports to overcome deficiencies in computer systems using a three-tiered memory hierarchy to enhance performance by creating a memory system with programmable operational characteristics that can be tailored for use with multiple different processors without an accompanying reduction in performance. The Federal Circuit reversed the dismissal of Visual’s patent infringement complaint against NVIDIA. The patent claims an improvement to computer memory systems and is not directed to an abstract idea, so it is patentable under 35 U.S.C. 101. The patent includes a microfiche appendix having a combined total of 263 frames of computer code. View "Visual Memory LLC v. NVIDIA Corp." on Justia Law

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Lottery, a state agency, began operating traditional lottery drawing games and instant lottery scratch-off games in North Carolina in 2006. It introduces new scratch-off games on the first Tuesday of each month and asserts that it has continuously used the mark FIRST TUESDAY since July 2013 in print materials, on its Website, and on point-of-sale displays. In 2014, Lottery applied for registration of the mark FIRST TUESDAY for “Lottery cards; scratch cards for playing lottery games” and for “Lottery services,” submitting specimens that have explanatory text such as “[n]ew scratch-offs” or “[n]ew scratch-offs the first Tuesday of every month.” The examining attorney refused registration, finding that the mark used in the context of Lottery’s promotional materials “merely describes a feature of [its] goods and services, namely, new versions of the goods and services are offered the first Tuesday of every month.” The Trademark Trial and Appeal Board and the Federal Circuit affirmed. Lottery’s promotional materials make clear that “new scratch-off games are offered on the first Tuesday of every month” and that fact would “be so understood by the relevant consumers who encounter the designation FIRST TUESDAY.” No “mental thought or multi-step reasoning is required to reach a conclusion as to the nature of the involved goods and services.” View "In re: North Carolina Lottery" on Justia Law