IPR Limbo During The Arthrex Decisions

Published date06 October 2022
Subject MatterIntellectual Property, Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Patent, Trials & Appeals & Compensation
Law FirmRothwell, Figg, Ernst & Manbeck, P.C.
AuthorMr Richard E. Waterman

In Polaris Innovations Ltd. v. Brent, No. 2019-1483, 2022 WL 4241665 (Fed. Cir. Sept. 15, 2022), the Federal Circuit faced an appeal that had bounced back and forth between the Court and Patent Trial and Appeal Board ("the Board") several times while it was caught in the administrative ambiguity resulting from the Arthrex decision. Although the Court made several substantive decisions about the patents at issue in the two inter partes review ("IPR") proceedings, this article will focus on the interaction of settlement, attempted termination, and appeal resulting from the unusual procedural posture of the case.

The timing of the IPR decisions underlying the Federal Circuit appeal created an unusual situation. NVIDIA challenged two patents owned by Polaris Innovations Limited, U.S. Patent Nos. 6,532,505 and 7,405,993, in two IPR proceedings. Polaris appealed to the Federal Circuit after the Patent Trial and Appeal Board determined that all challenged claims were unpatentable. During the appeal, NVIDIA and Polaris settled. As a result of this, the Patent Office intervened to defend the Board's decision. In this first round of appeals to the Federal Circuit, the Court vacated the decision and remanded in light of Arthrex, Inc. v. Smith & Nephew, Inc., 941 F.3d 1320 (Fed. Cir. 2019), which raised Appointments Clause issues affecting IPRs generally. On remand, the IPRs were administratively suspended pending Supreme Court review of the Arthrex decision. When the Supreme Court vacated the Arthrex decision, the Board's decisions in the IPRs were reinstated.

After the parties settled, Polaris had sought to terminate the IPRs. Now that the IPR decisions were reinstated, Polaris asked the Board to grant Polaris' still-pending motion to terminate the IPRs. The Board determined that the Final Decisions in each IPR were no longer vacated so no further action by the Board was necessary, and therefore termination was inappropriate. Instead, Polaris could request review by the Director. The Director denied rehearing. Polaris appealed, asking the Federal Circuit to vacate the Board's final decisions and remand for termination of the IPRs. The Court disagreed.

The Federal Circuit agreed with the Board's decision that the motions to terminate were untimely. The Board addressed settlement under 35 U.S.C. 317(a):

An inter partes review instituted under this chapter shall be terminated with respect to any petitioner upon the joint request of the petitioner and the patent owner...

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