The United States Supreme Court affirmed the use of the clear and convincing evidence standard for challenges to the validity of patents last week in a closely watched and eagerly anticipated case, i4i v. Microsoft. The Supreme Court’s opinion re-affirmed decades of case law that the standard to challenge the…
Articles Posted by Stan Gibson
Patent for Insurance Claim Processing Held Invalid Under Bilski
In a recent decision from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware, the district court considered defendant’s motion for summary judgment of invalidity. The plaintiff’s patent is directed to a computer program for developing a component based software for the insurance industry. The patent contained both method…
The Person of Ordinary Skill in the Art May Not Save your Patent
To have a valid patent, an inventor must disclose sufficient detail in the specification to enable the patent, often referred to as the enablement requirement. To fulfill the enablement requirement, an inventor must disclose enough detail in the patent to teach a person of ordinary skill in the art to…
Discovery Regarding Future Products Denied Despite Argument of Accelerated Market Entry
In a patent case pending against Intel in the District of New Mexico, the plaintiff sought to compel the production of Intel’s future products that were under development. The litigation involved plaintiff’s claim that Intel infringed its patent for a process called “double patterning,” which is a process that allows…
Scheduling Orders in Multi-Defendant Litigation – Another Decision
One of the district courts in the Eastern District of Texas has issued several orders in multi-defendant patent infringement cases addressing whether changes to the court’s normal scheduling orders were necessary. The district court has previously expressed concern in several cases that defendants may be faced with a Hobson’s choice…
Challenge the Written Description–Or Lose Your Patent
In pursuing patents for their inventions, inventors need to make sure that earlier filed provisional patent applications filed by other inventors do not preclude the inventor’s patent application. The Federal Circuit’s decision in In re Giacomini, (Fed. Cir. July 7, 2010) affirmed a USPTO Board of Patent Appeal’s decision that…
Glory Licensing LLC v. Toys “R” Us, Inc.: The Machine-or-Transformation Test Is Not Satisfied
In a recent decision from New Jersey, the district court granted a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. The district court granted the motion because the plaintiff’s patents did not qualify as patentable subject matter under the machine-or-transformation, which the United States Supreme Court has recently determine…
Vertical Computer Systems, Inc. v. Interwoven, Inc.: A Transfer in Part
In a case involving application of the “first-filed action” doctrine and transfer, the district court in the Eastern District of Texas transferred a case as to one defendant but severed and kept the case as to two other defendants. One of the defendants in Texas, Interwoven, began the litigation, not…
Continuations, Parents and Loss of Priority
The written description requirement is of heightened importance in determining the priority date for continuation patent applications. Without a sufficient written description that supports and details the claims of the patent, the priority date of the parent patent may be lost for the continuation application. This issue was recently addressed…
Waiver of Attorney-Client Privilege
The district court determined that plaintiff had waived the attorney-client privilege because the plaintiff’s in-house counsel revealed too much information in answering questions during a deposition. The defendants raised the waiver issue in the context of a motion to compel by contending that the plaintiff’s in-house counsel’s answers during a…