doctrine of equivalents

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Doctrine of Equivalents Intro to IP – Prof Merges 2.2.10

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Doctrine of Equivalents. Intro to IP – Prof Merges 2.2.10. Topics Today. Doctrine of Equivalents Prosecution history estoppel. Equivalents/Literal Claim Scope. Range of Equivalents. Literal Claim Scope. Hughes Satellite – p. 275-78. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Doctrine of Equivalents

Doctrine of Equivalents

Intro to IP – Prof Merges

2.2.10

Page 2: Doctrine of Equivalents

Topics Today

• Doctrine of Equivalents

• Prosecution history estoppel

Page 3: Doctrine of Equivalents

Equivalents/Literal Claim Scope

Literal ClaimScope

Range ofEquivalents

Page 4: Doctrine of Equivalents

Hughes Satellite – p. 275-78

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Hughes Aircraft Co. v. United States, 717 F.2d. 1351, 1362-63 (Fed. Cir. 1983).

• Later developed technology to use onboard computers to control satellite orientation is equivalent to receive signals form the satellite and use the computers on earth to control the orientation of the satellite)

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Hughes VIII 1998

• Because Hughes Aircraft Co. v. United States , 717 F.2d 1351, 219 USPQ 473 (Fed. Cir. 1983) ( Hughes VII ) satisfies the legal requirements announced in Warner-Jenkinson , we affirm.

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S/E

S/E

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S/E

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Literal Infringement

S/E

Doctrine of Equivalents

Patent

•f “means disposed . . . for receiving . . . signals•g “said valve being coupled to said last-named means and responsive ...

ClaimElements

?

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Literal InfringementDoctrine of Equivalents

PioneeringInventions

ModestInventions

Patent

•f “means disposed . . . for receiving . . . signals•g “said valve being coupled to said last-named means and responsive ...

ClaimElements

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Prosecution History Estoppel

• Festo v. SKK Kabushiki, p. 279

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Original Claim Scope

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Original Claim Scope

Narrowed Scope, after amend-ment

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Accused product: ultra-purifica-tion at 9.5 pH

No Infringement under DOE

X

Page 22: Doctrine of Equivalents

Accused Product: pH of 5.0 – can Hilton-Davis assert infringement under DOE?

??

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• United States Patent 4,354,125 Stoll October 12, 1982 Magnetically coupled arrangement for a driving and a driven member

The invention is concerned with a magnetically coupled arrangement for a driving and a driven member, which arrangement is operable by a pressure medium and is used in a conveying system. A slidable piston (16) within a tube (10) has an arrangement of annular magnets (20) provided at each end with sealing and sliding members (24, 26). A driven assembly (18) slidable on the outer surface of the tube (10) has an arrangement of annular magnets (32) corresponding to the magnets (20) and provided at each end with a sliding ring (44). The members (24, 26, 44) prevent ingress of foreign bodies to the magnet locations, and consequently enable the spacing between the magnets and the tube (10) to be very small. A good magnetic coupling is achieved resulting in effective transmission of power. Several pistons (16) abutting one another can be used for conveying heavy loads.

Inventors: Stoll; Kurt (Lenzhalde 72, D-7300 Esslingen, DE) Appl. No.: 153999Filed: May 28, 1980

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Amendments

• Two patents –

–Stoll, 4,354,125

–Carroll, 3,779,401

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Prosecution History

• Amendments

• What limitations did patentee add during prosecution?

• Why were they made?

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How amended?

• Claims changed to include a new limitation: piston assembly must now include a pair of sealing rings

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Equivalents and Prosecution History

• P. 283

• “Insubstantial alterations”

• BUT: Cannot “recapture” an insusbtantial alteration GIVEN UP during prosecution

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1st point: “related to patentability”

• Claim amendment for any reason can give rise to estoppel

• Not just prior art-related reasons

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Presumption arising from claim amendments

• P. 287

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2nd Point: The 3-Part Test

• Supreme Court rejects “complete bar”

• Federal Circuit’s new rule reversed and thrown out

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Original Claim Scope

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Original Claim Scope

Narrowed Scope, after amend-ment

Page 36: Doctrine of Equivalents

2nd Point: The 3-Part Test

• P 287

• [1] Unforeseeable equivalents

• [2] Amendment bears “tangential relation” to equivalent

• [3] “Some other reason” -- ?

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Doctrinal Sequence

• FIRST: What is the literal meaning of the claim language?

• THEN: If the accused product falls outside that language, is it an “equivalent” of the claimed invention?

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What is the test for equivalence?

• Is the accused product an “insubstantial alteration” under Warner-Jenkinson and Festo?

• Even if so, was this trivial variation on the claim “given up” during patent prosecution; in which case, equivalents are “estopped”

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Equivalents/Literal Claim Scope

Literal ClaimScope

Range ofEquivalents

What is a “baffle”? Is the tank “thereon”?

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Equivalents/Literal Claim Scope

Literal ClaimScope

Range ofEquivalents

Is a single sealing ring equivalent to “a pair” of them?

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Prosecution History Estoppel

1. Warner-Jenkinson: presumption that part of claim coverage is surrendered when applicant amends claim

2. Festo case: 3 Ways to beat the presumption

3. Post-Festo developments: “disclosed but not claimed”/dedicated to the public

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“Range of Equivalents”

Infringement under DOE ?

Literal Claim Scope

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Warner-Jenkinson

• DOE Survives challenge

• Presumption in cases of claim amendment: amendment made for reasons related to patentability; prosecution history estoppel applies SO: Presumption of no DOE, you are limited to

your literal claim language

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Original Claim Scope

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Original Claim Scope

Narrowed Scope, after amend-ment