Federal Circuit Issues Opinion Rendering Patent Claims Unenforceable Due To Prosecution Laches

JurisdictionUnited States,Federal
Law FirmBuchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC
Subject MatterIntellectual Property, Patent
AuthorLloyd Smith and William C. Rowland
Published date26 January 2023

In a January 20, 2023 opinion in Personalized Media Communications, LLC v. Apple Inc., 21-2275 the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an Eastern District of Texas District Court ruling finding plaintiff's PMC's patent unenforceable due to prosecution laches.

Immediately prior to changes in U.S. law that changed the term of a U.S. patent from 17 years from the date of issuance to 20 years from the application's priority date, the plaintiff PMC filed 328 applications, referred to as GATT-Bubble applications. A purpose of these filings was to have a large number of applications for which the Applicant could extend the prosecution to apply against later developed technology. Although the law allows pending applications to be amended to cover later developed technology, Gentry Gallery, Inc. v. Berkline Corp., 134 F.3d 1473, 1479 (Fed. Cir. 1998), the district court found that PMC's patents were unenforceable due to prosecution laches.

At trial, a jury had awarded PMC over $308 million in reasonable royalties against Apple. In a separate bench trial, the district court found PMC's '091 patent unenforceable based on prosecution laches. J.A. 1-3. Relying on the Federal Circuit's opinion in Hyatt v. Hirshfeld, 998 F.3d 1347, 1359-62 (Fed. Cir. 2021), the district court determined that PMC engaged in an unreasonable and unexplained delay amounting to an egregious abuse of the statutory patent system. The Federal Circuit upheld this determination.

The Federal Circuit held that Prosecution laches requires proving two elements:

  1. The patentee's delay in prosecution must be unreasonable and inexcusable under the totality of circumstances.
  2. The accused infringer must have suffered prejudice attributable to the delay.

Concerning delay, the district court faulted PMC for waiting until 2003...

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