Federal Circuits, Fed. Cir. (December 21, 1988)
Docket number: 88-1265
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U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Unpublished Disposition Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Aircast Incorporated, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Royce Medical Company, Lenox Hill Brace Shop, Inc., Lenox Hill Orthotics, Inc., Tracy Grim and Jeffrey D. Haines, Defendants/Cross-Appellants., 928 F.2d 412 (Fed. Cir. 1991) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Aircast Incorporated, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Royce Medical Company, Lenox Hill Brace Shop, Inc., Lenox Hill Orthotics, Inc., Tracy Grim and Jeffrey D. Haines, Defendants/Cross-Appellants.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Unpublished Disposition Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Benchcraft, Inc., Riverside Furniture Corp., and Hickory Hill Furniture Co., A/K/a Crestline Furniture Co., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Broyhill Furniture Industries, Inc., Defendant-Appellant., 871 F.2d 1096 (Fed. Cir. 1989) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Benchcraft, Inc., Riverside Furniture Corp., and Hickory Hill Furniture Co., A/K/a Crestline Furniture Co., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Broyhill Furniture Industries, Inc., Defendant-Appellant.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Unpublished Disposition Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Paramount Packaging Corporation, Plaintiff/Cross-Appellant, v. Cello Bag Company, Inc., Defendant/Appellant., 909 F.2d 1494 (Fed. Cir. 1990) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Paramount Packaging Corporation, Plaintiff/Cross-Appellant, v. Cello Bag Company, Inc., Defendant/Appellant.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Kbl Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Ming-Tay Hardware Industrial Co., Ltd. and Wen Tay Kuo, Defendants/Cross-Appellants., 891 F.2d 298 (Fed. Cir. 1989) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Kbl Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Ming-Tay Hardware Industrial Co., Ltd. and Wen Tay Kuo, Defendants/Cross-Appellants.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Unpublished Disposition Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Mag Instrument, Inc., Appellant, v. the United States International Trade Commission, Appellee, Kassnar Imports, Inc.; Brinkmann Corporation; Brinkmann International (Hong Kong), Ltd.; and J. Baxter Brinkmann International Corporation, Intervenors., 868 F.2d 1278 (Fed. Cir. 1989) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Mag Instrument, Inc., Appellant, v. the United States International Trade Commission, Appellee, Kassnar Imports, Inc.; Brinkmann Corporation; Brinkmann International (Hong Kong), Ltd.; and J. Baxter Brinkmann International Corporation, Intervenors.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Unpublished Disposition Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Southwest Aerospace Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Teledyne Industries, Inc., and Teledyne Brown Engineering, Defendants-Appellants., 884 F.2d 1398 (Fed. Cir. 1989) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Southwest Aerospace Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Teledyne Industries, Inc., and Teledyne Brown Engineering, Defendants-Appellants.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fed. Cir. - Unpublished Disposition Notice: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.8(B) States that Opinions and Orders Which Are Designated as Not Citable as Precedent Shall Not Be Employed or Cited as Precedent. this Does Not Preclude Assertion of Issues of Claim Preclusion, Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Rohm and Haas Company, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Mobil Oil Corporation, Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. and Rhone-Poulenc Agrochimie, Defendants-Appellants. Mobil Oil Corporation, Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. and Rhone-Poulenc Agrochimie, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Rohm and Haas Company, Defendant-Appellee., 895 F.2d 1421 (Fed. Cir. 1990) Issue Preclusion, Judicial Estoppel, Law of the Case or the Like Based on a Decision of the Court Rendered in a Nonprecedential Opinion or Order. Rohm and Haas Company, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Mobil Oil Corporation, Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. and Rhone-Poulenc Agrochimie, Defendants-Appellants. Mobil Oil Corporation, Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. and Rhone-Poulenc Agrochimie, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Rohm and Haas Company, Defendant-Appellee.
Garland P. Andrews, Richards, Harris, Medlock & Andrews, Dallas, Tex., argued for plaintiffs-appellants. With him on the brief were David L. Hitchcock and Eugenia S. Hansen.
James T. Fitzgibbon, Lockwood, Alex, Fitzgibbon & Cummings, Chicago, Ill., argued for defendant-appellee. With him on the brief was Angelo J. Bufalino. Also on the brief were Richard T. Zwirner and Judith L. Borden, Schuyler, Roche & Zwirner, Chicago, Ill.Before MARKEY, Chief Judge, SMITH and ARCHER, Circuit Judges.MARKEY, Chief Judge.Kingsdown Medical Consultants, Ltd. and E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc., (Kingsdown) appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, No. 84 C 6113, holding U.S. Patent No. 4,460,363 ('363) unenforceable because of inequitable conduct before the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO). We reverse and remand.BACKGROUNDKingsdown sued Hollister Incorporated (Hollister) for infringement of claims 2, 4, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 27, 28, and 29 of Kingsdown's '363 patent.1 The district court held the patent unenforceable because of Kingsdown's conduct in respect of claim 9 and reached no other issue.The invention claimed in the '363 patent is a two-piece ostomy appliance for use by patients with openings in their abdominal walls for release of waste.The two pieces of the appliance are a pad and a detachable pouch. The pad is secured to the patient's body encircling the abdominal wall opening. Matching coupling rings are attached to the pad and to the pouch. When engaged, the rings provide a water tight seal. Disengaging the rings allows for removal of the pouch.A. The Prosecution HistoryKingsdown filed its original patent application in February 1978. The '363 patent issued July 17, 1984. The intervening period of more than six-and-a-half years saw a complex prosecution, involving the submission, rejection, amendment, re-numbering, etc., of 118 claims, a continuation application, an appeal, a petition to make special, and citation and discussion of 44 references.After a series of office actions and amendments, Kingsdown submitted claim 50. With our emphasis on the language of interest here, claim 50 read:A coupling for an ostomy appliance comprising a pad or dressing having a generally circular aperture for passage of the stoma, said pad or dressing aperture encircled by a coupling member and an ostomy bag also having a generally circular aperture for passage of the stoma, said bag aperture encircled by a second coupling member, one of said coupling members being two opposed walls of closed looped annular channel form and the other coupling member of closed loop form having a rib or projection dimensioned to be gripped between the mutaully (sic) opposed channel walls when said coupling members are connected, said rib or projection having a thin resilient deflectible seal strip extending therefrom, which, when said rib or projection is disposed between said walls, springs away therefrom to sealingly engage one of said walls, and in which each coupling member is formed of resilient synthetic plastics material.The examiner found that claim 50 contained allowable subject matter, but rejected the claim for indefiniteness under 35 U.S.C. Sec . 112, second paragraph, objecting to "encircled", because the coupling ring could not, in the examiner's view, "encircle" the aperture in the pad, the ring and aperture not being "coplanar." The examiner had not in earlier actions objected to "encircled" to describe similar relationships in other claims. Nor had the examiner found the identical "encircled" language indefinite in original claims 1 and 6 which were combined to form claim 50.To render claim 50 definite, and thereby overcome the Sec. 112 rejection, Kingsdown amended the claim. With our emphasis on the changed language, amended claim 50 read:A coupling for an ostomy appliance comprising a pad or dressing having a body contacting surface and an outer surface with a generally circular aperture for passage of the stoma extending through said pad or dressing, a coupling member extending outwardly from said outer pad or dressing surface and encircling the intersection of said aperture and said outer pad or dressing surface, and an ostomy bag also having a generally circular aperture in one bag wall for passage of the stoma with a second coupling member affixed to said bag wall around the periphery of said bag wall aperture and extending outwardly from said bag wall, one of said coupling members being two opposed walls of closed looped annular channel form and the other coupling member of closed loop form having a rib or projection dimensioned to be gripped between the mutually opposed channel walls when said coupling members are connected, said rib or projection having a thin resilient deflectible seal strip extending therefrom, which, when said rib or projection is disposed between said walls, springs away therefrom to sealingly engage one of said walls, and in which each coupling member is formed of resilient synthetic plastic material.To avoid the Sec. 112 rejection, Kingsdown had thus added the pad's two surfaces, replaced "aperture encircled", first occurrence, with "encircling the intersection of said aperture and said outer pad or dressing surface", and deleted "encircled", second occurrence. In an advisory action, the examiner said the changes in claim language overcame the Sec. 112 rejection and that amended claim 50 would be allowable.While Kingsdown's appeal of other rejected claims was pending, Kingsdown's patent attorney saw a two-piece ostomy appliance manufactured by Hollister. Kingsdown engaged an outside counsel to file a continuation application and withdrew the appeal.Thirty-four claims were filed with the continuation application, including new and never-before-examined claims and 22 claims indicated as corresponding to claims allowed in the parent application. In prosecuting the continuation, a total of 44 references, including 14 new references, were cited and 29 claims were substituted for the 34 earlier filed, making a total of 63 claims presented. Kingsdown submitted a two-column list, one column containing the claim numbers of 22 previously allowed claims, the other column containing the claim numbers of the 21 claims in the continuation application that corresponded to those previously allowed claims.2 That list indicated, incorrectly, that claim 43 in the continuation application corresponded to allowed claim 50 in the parent application. Claim 43 actually corresponded to the unamended claim 50 that had been rejected for indefiniteness under Sec. 112. Claim 43 was renumbered as the present claim 9 in the '363 patent.There was another claim 43. It was in the parent application and was combined with claim 55 of the parent application to form claim 61 in the continuation. Claim 55 contained the language of amended claim 50 relating to "encircled." It was allowed as submitted and was not involved in any discussion of indefiniteness. Claim 61 became claim 27 of the patent. Claim 27 reads as follows:An ostomy appliance comprising a pad or dressing having a body contacting surface and an outer surface with an aperture for passage of the stoma extending through said pad or dressing, a coupling member extending outwardly from said pad or dressing and encircling the intersection of said aperture and the outer surface of said pad or dressing and an ostomy bag also having an aperture in one bag wall for passage of the stoma with a second coupling member affixed to said bag wall around the periphery of said bag wall aperture and extending outwardly from said bag wall, said bag coupling member being two opposed walls of closed loop channel form and said pad or dressing coupling member being a closed loop form having a rib or projection dimensioned to be gripped between the opposed channel walls when said coupling members are connected, and a thin resilient seal strip extending at an angle radially inward from an inner surface of said rib or projection which engages the outer surface of said inner channel wall and wherein said rib or projection has a peripheral bead extending therefrom in a direction opposite said deflectible seal strip and said outer channel wall has a complementary bead on its inner surface, each of said two beads having an annular surface inclined to the common axis of said coupling members when connected, the arrangement being such that said two annular surfaces are in face-to-face contact when said two members are in their mutually coupled positions. (emphasis provided)B. The District CourtThe district court rendered its opinion and announced its decision orally from the bench.Having examined the prosecution history, the district court found that the examiner could have relied on the representation that claim 43 corresponded to allowable claim 50 and rejected Kingsdown's suggestion that the examiner must have made an independent examination of claim 43, because: (1) in the Notice of Allowance, the examiner said the claims were allowed "in view of applicant's communication of 2 July 83";3 (2) there was no evidence that the examiner had compared the language of amended claim 50 with that of claim 43; and (3) the examiner could justifiably rely on the representation because of an applicant's duty of candor.The district court found the materiality element of inequitable conduct, because allowability of claim 50 turned on the amendment overcoming the Sec. 112 rejection in the parent application. Kingsdown's knowledge of materiality was inferred from claim 50's having been deemed allowable in the parent application only after the change in claim language.The court found the deceitful intent element of inequitable conduct, because Kingsdown was grossly negligent in not noticing the error, or, in the alternative, because Kingsdown's acts indicated an intent to deceive the PTO.The court found that Kingsdown's patent attorney was grossly negligent in not catching the misrepresentation because a mere ministerial review of the language of amended claim 50 in the parent application and of claim 43 in the continuing application would have uncovered the error, and because Kingsdown's patent attorney had had several opportunities to make that review.The district court stated that the narrower language of amended claim 50 gave Hollister a possible defense, i.e., that Hollister's coupling member does not encircle the intersection of the aperture and the pad surface because it has an intervening "floating flange" member. The court inferred motive to deceive the PTO because Kingsdown's patent attorney viewed the Hollister appliance after he had amended claim 50 and before the continuation application was filed. The court expressly declined to make any finding on whether the accused device would or would not infringe any claims, but stated that Kingsdown's patent attorney must have perceived that Hollister would have a defense against infringement of the amended version of claim 50 that it would not have against the unamended version.The district court rejected Kingsdown's argument that unamended claim 50, which became claim 43 and then claim 9 of the '363 patent, satisfied the requirements of Sec. 112 but did not expressly or unequivocally decide that question.4ISSUEWhether the district court's finding of intent to deceive was clearly erroneous, rendering its determination that inequitable conduct occurred an abuse of discretion.5OPINIONWe confront a case of first impression, in which inequitable conduct has been held to reside in an incorrect inclusion in a continuation application of a claim that contained allowable subject matter, but had been rejected as indefinite in the parent application.Inequitable conduct resides in failure to disclose material information, or submission of false material information, with an intent to deceive, and those two elements, materiality and intent, must be proven by clear and convincing evidence. J.P. Stevens & Co., Inc. v. Lex Tex Ltd., Inc., 747 F.2d 1553, 1559, 223 USPQ 1089, 1092 (Fed.Cir.1984), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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