Category Archives: post grant review

FED. CIR. SLAMS DOOR ON “ADMITTED PRIOR ART” — OR DOES IT?

By Tom Engellenner
A recent decision by the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Fed. Cir.) in Qualcomm Incorporated v. Apple, Inc., Nos. 2020-1558, 2020-1559 (February 1, 2022) has held that “applicant admitted prior art” (AAPA) does not fall within the category of “patents or printed publications” and, hence, cannot be used by petitioners in inter partes review (IPR) proceedings as a basis for challenging issued U.S. patents.  Although the decision holds that admissions by patentees in their patent applications (or during patent prosecution at the Patent Office) cannot be a primary reference for proving a lack of novelty or obviousness, the decision leaves the door open for challengers to use such admissions to show the “general knowledge of a skilled artisan” during the IPR administrative trial.

The Applicant Admitted Prior Art (“AAPA”) doctrine has been used for many years both during examination of claims at the USPTO and by defendants in patent infringement suits.  Basically, the AAPA doctrine asserts that anything you say is prior art in your application can be used against you as prior art.  

This doctrine has been also used for nearly a decade in the administrative trials established by the America Invents Act (AIA), most notably in IPR proceedings where the AIA statute explicitly limits challenges to issued U.S. patents to those based on “prior art consisting of patents or printed publications.”  Various panels of administrative patent judges (APJs)  – there are over 300 APJs – have been all over the map on the issue of whether so-called “applicant admitted prior art” can be the basis for a novelty or obviousness determination, e.g. can prior art Reference A and AAPA be combined to render a claim obvious?

In the Qualcomm case, Apple challenged a Qualcomm patent on a power supply device that could supply power at two different voltages depending upon network needs.  The prior art asserted by Apple consisted of Figure 1 from the challenged Qualcomm patent itself, labelled “prior art,” and second reference (a prior published patent application “Majcherczak”).  Apple’s argued that it would have been obvious to add a feedback circuit as shown in Majcherczac into the overall circuit shown in Figure 1 and arrive at the claimed invention.  Quialcomm argued that it was impermissible to use Figure 1 of its own patent as prior art. 

The Federal Circuit panel agreed with Qualcomm, stating:

[The AIA] does not permit AAPA in this case to be the basis of a ground in an inter partes review, because it is not contained in a document that is a prior art patent or prior art printed publication. 

The Federal Circuit panel that decided this case also deemed it to be “precedential,” meaning that the three judges assigned this case concluded that the decision “significantly adds to a body of law.”

The Qualcomm decision should not be surprising.  Another Federal Circuit panel had broadly hinted at the limits of using AAPA back in January 2021 in the case of Koninklijke Philips v. Google, 948 F.3d 1330, (Fed. Cir. 2020), in which the judges held that “general knowledge” was not a patent or printed publication and, hence such general knowledge could not form the basis for invalidating a claim in an IPR proceeding.

Moreover, the Director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) had also issued a guidance memorandum on August 18, 2020 instructing PTAB judges that statements of the applicant in the challenged patent, e.g., AAPA, do not qualify as “prior art consisting of patents or printed publications,” but fall into the category of evidence the Board may consider for more limited purposes:

[W]hile a variety of evidence is admissible for limited purposes, the focus-“the basis”-of every IPR must be “prior art consisting of patents or printed publications.” 

The memorandum further explains that “[s]tatements in a challenged patent’s specification may be used, however, when they evidence the general knowledge possessed by someone of ordinary skill in the art. That evidence, if used in conjunction with one or more prior art patents or printed publications forming “the basis” of the proceeding under § 311, can support an obviousness argument. 

The Fed. Circuit’s Qualcomm decision echoes this memorandum in noting that:

As a patentee’s admissions about the scope and content of the prior art provide a factual foundation as to what a skilled artisan would have known at the time of invention, it follows that AAPA may be used in similar ways in an inter partes review. . . .  Such uses include, for example, furnishing a motivation to combine, or supplying a missing claim limitation.  Thus, even though evidence such as expert testimony and party admissions are not themselves prior art references, they are permissible evidence in an inter partes review for establishing the background knowledge possessed by a person of ordinary skill in the art. “  [citations omitted]

Accordingly, AAPA is not useless in challenging a patent in an IPR or other AIA proceeding.  Petitioners challenging a patent should not use AAPA as a reference in formulating an obviousness rejection.  Instead, the challenger should find something that is truly a patent or printed publication that discloses the same thing (or something analogous) and then use AAPA to bolster the argument that the skilled artisan would have been motivated to combine the cited references.

2021 – PTAB YEAR IN REVIEW

Last year marked the tenth anniversary of the enactment of the America Invents Act (AIA). This act created a number of new procedures for the public to challenge issued U.S. patents.  Over the past decade, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has received over 12,000 petitions for review of issued patents.  Last year, the PTAB received over 1,000 petitions, and held trials on roughly 65% of the petitions that were considered.  Once a trial was initiated, only about 25% of challenged claims survived PTAB review.  Many of the aggrieved patent owners appealed to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit and some sought further review from the U.S. Supreme Court.  The following is a brief summary of some of the more important and court and administrative decisions in 2021.

Supreme Court says AIA patent trials are legit

In June, 2021, the Supreme Court finally answered the question of whether administrative patent trials under the AIA were lawful.  Many litigants over the past decade (mostly patent owners whose patents had been invalidated) have tried to cast doubt on the legitimacy of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) but none got so far as Arthrex, Inc., the owner of a patent on a knotless suture system. 

Shortly after its patent issued in 2015, Arthrex sued Smith & Nephew.  The defendant, Smith & Nephew, filed a successful petition for inter partes review under the AIA, and a PTAB panel of administrative law judges found the challenged claims of the Arthrex patent lacking in novelty and, hence, were unpatentable.  Arthrex appealed and presented a novel theory for the first time before the Federal Circuit based on the “appointments clause” of the U.S. constitution.

In 2019 the Federal Circuit ruled on the appeal and concluded that the way administrative patent judges (APJs) were appointed to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) was unconstitutional and vacated the decision with a remand that the case be heard again by another PTAB panel. The case was Arthrex v. Smith & Nephew No. 2018-2140 (Fed. Cir., Oct. 31, 2019).

The decision cured the problem going forward by severing a portion of the enabling legislation that prevents the administrative judges from being fired except for cause. The Fed. Circuit decision essentially makes all PTAB judges subject to dismissal by the secretary of Commerce without cause.  Because they lacked job protection, that made the judges “inferior” officers, rather than “superior” officers, under the U.S. Constitution and, hence, were deemed properly appointed (without the need for Senate confirmation).

Needless to say, not many people were happy with the Federal Circuit’s “fix” – not the less of whom were the 300 plus administrative judges who found themselves without tenure.  The Federal Circuit decision also created a bit of a conundrum for the USPTO by concluding that Arthrex (and many other similarly situated patent owners in other already decided cases) were entitled to rehearings.

On appeal, the Supreme Court agreed with the Federal Circuit that the USPTO’s appointment of APJs was constitutionally flawed but disagreed on the remedy.  Rather than strip APJs of all job security, the Court concluded that the Director of the USPTO should have the authority to review all PTAB decisions.  Arthrex was entitled to review of its PTAB decision by the USPTO Director but not a new trial.

The USPTO implemented interim rules shortly after the Arthrex decision to enable parties to seek review of PTAB decisions by the USPTO Director.  During the half year following the interim rules, about 80 requests for Director review were filed.  Although most of the requests for Director review so far have been unsuccessful, in two cases the Director did reverse a PTAB panel decision and remand the case to the Board.  In December, 2021, the USPTO clarified its interim rule to make it clear that parties could seek review not only of final written decisions but also of the initial decisions of PTAB panels on whether or not to institute a trial.

Discretionary Petition Denials by the PTAB Continue to be Controversial

The USPTO has taken the position since the beginning of patent challenges under the AIA that has plenary authority to deny inter partes review (IPR) and post grant review (PGR) as a matter of discretion.  For almost a decade, various PTAB panels have expounded reasons for why a petition (typical an IPR petition) should be denied a trial even when the arguments have merit.  The pleura of rationales for discretionary denials led to a 2017 decision in General Plastic Co., Ltd v. Canon Kabushiki Kaisha, IPR2016-01357 (PTAB Sept. 6, 2017) that the PTAB has deemed “precedential.”  In the General Plastic case, the PTAB asserted its authority to deny “serial” petitions by the same petitioner and listed seven factors to be considered.

Despite the General Plastics decision being deemed precedential, the PTAB has continued to layer on more reasons for discretionary petition denials.  In 2019, the PTAB began denying parallel petitions against the same patent by different petitioners and updated its rules of practice to assert an expectation of only one IPR per patent.  Also in 2019, another decision, NHK Spring Co. Ltd. v. Intri-Plex Techs. Inc., IPR2018-00752 (PTAB Sept. 12, 2018) was likewise deemed precedential and set out more factors for discretionary denial, e.g., when prior art or arguments had previously been raised during prosecution or were being presented in co-pending Federal District Court litigation.

In 2020, the PTAB designated yet another decision, Apple Inc. v Fintiv, Inc., IPR 2020-00019 (PTAB May 13, 2020) as precedential.  This decision spawned six more reasons for denying petitions when co-pending litigation has already started.  The Fintiv decision required PTAB panels to take into consideration whether the parties or issues overlap, the state of the federal court litigation and whether a trial date is set earlier than the projected PTAB decision, among other things.

The net result has been a steadily declining trial institution rate at the PTAB.  A study by Unified Patents has estimated that nearly 19% of all IPR petitions were denied in 2020 as a matter of discretion.  This surge in “procedural” denials prompted the USPTO to request public comments in late 2020 on the Fintiv factors. 

In January 2021, the USPTO published a summary of the comments showing that there was widespread dissatisfaction with its “case-specific” approach to discretionary denials, i.e., allowing individual panels to rationalize their discretionary denials and then approving some decisions as “precedential.”  Many commenters urged the USPTO to abandon this approach and instead engage in formal rule-making to govern discretionary denials.  Since the USPTO has shown no interest in replacing its case-specific approach, some parties are now requesting that Congress review this practice and, possibly revise the AIA.

New Rules for Motions to Amend

In January 2021, the USPTO finalized rules codifying a Federal Circuit decision in Aqua Products, Inc. v. Matal, 872 F.3d 1290 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (en banc), addressing the party’s burdens of persuasion when a patent owner wishes to present an amendment to the patent claims in response to a petitioner’s arguments.   The final rule “assigns the burden of persuasion to the petitioner to show, by a preponderance of evidence, that any proposed substitute claims are unpatentable.”  On the other hand, the final rule assigns the burden of persuasion on the patent owner “to show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the motion to amend complies with certain statutory and regulatory requirements for a motion to amend,” i.e., rules that preclude a patent owner from widening the scope of claims, introducing new matter, or proposing an unreasonable number of substitute claims.

The final rule also asserts a right to reject an amendment “in the interests of justice” even when it is not opposed by the petitioner, e.g., due to a settlement or withdrawal by the challenger.  A decision by a PTAB panel to deny a motion to amend in such circumstances must be supported by “readily identifiable and persuasive evidence of record.”

Ex Parte Reexams on the Rise

The USPTO reported that there were 273 requests for ex parte reexamination filed in fiscal year 2021 versus only 168 in fiscal year 2020. According to the Chief Judge of the PTAB, David Ruschke, the number of ex parte reexam requests had been fairly stable from 2016 to 2020 but last year the PTAB saw “quite an uptick.”  The increase in ex parte reexam requests may be in response to the increasing number of initial determinations where the PTAB panels has exercised their “discretion” to deny inter parte reviews under the AIA. 

NO ARTHREX DO-OVER FOR PETITIONERS DENIED AIA TRIALS

By Tom Engellenner
Petitioners in administrative patent challenges under the America Invents Act (AIA) that are denied a trial are not entitled to an Arthrex do-over according to a recent Federal Circuit panel holding in United Fire Protection v. Engineered Corrosion Solutions, Appeal No. 2020-1272 (Fed. Cir. May 19, 2020).

Late last year we reported on the Federal Circuit’s Arthrex decision that send shock waves through the IP community by holding that the way administrative patent judges (APJs) were appointed to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) pursuant to the AIA was unconstitutional.  Arthrex v. Smith & Nephew, No. 2018-2140 (Fed. Cir., Oct. 31, 2019).

The Arthrex decision devised a cure for this problem going forward by severing a portion of the enabling AIA legislation that prevents the administrative judges from being fired except for cause. The Federal Circuit’s Arthrex  decision essentially made all PTAB judges subject to dismissal by the secretary of Commerce without cause.  The Federal Circuit panel then remanded the Arthrex case back to the PTAB for a rehearing before a different panel of judges that had been cleansed by severing their job security.

The Arthrex decision create a class of litigants who, like Arthrex, had already received a final written decision on a patent challenge but were still in their pre-appeal period. Those parties — if they chose to appeal and raise the “appointments” issue — would also allowed to get their decisions vacated and remanded.

But the Arthrex decision also cut-off another class of litigants whose cases had not yet reached a PTAB final written decision.  Because the problem was “fixed” by taking away the job security of the PTAB judges, the judges would be deemed properly appointed after the Arthrex ruling and their decisions going forward would no longer be unconstitutional.

Following the Arthrex decision, the Federal Circuit expanded the class of litigants entitled to a remand and rehearing of their cases to include patent owners who lost appeals at the PTAB in inter partes reexamination, and ex parte reexamination proceeding during the pre-Arthrex window of time.  (See, Virnetx Inc. v. Cisco Systems, Inc., Appeal No. 2019-1671 (Fed. Cir., May 13, 2020 – inter partes reexamination) and In re JHO Intellectual Property Holdings LLC, Appeal No. 2019-2330 (Fed. Cir. June 18, 2020 – ex parte appeals)).

It remains to be seen whether the Anthrex decision will also apply to patent applicants who lost appeals of examiner rejections at the PTAB during the pre-Arthrex time window.  This issue is being argued in In re: Boloro Global Ltd., Appeal No.1209-2349. Continue reading

2019 PTAB Year In Review Part IV: THE PRECEDENTIAL OPINION PANEL (POP)

The Precedential Opinion Panel (POP), formed in September 2018, began rendering opinions in 2019. The POP is intended to provide two main functions: rehear matters in pending trials and appeals of exceptional importance; and assist the Director in determining whether a previously issued decision should be designated as precedential or informative. Its decisions are binding authority on the PTAB. In 2019, the POP issued 3 decisions, designated 8 decisions as precedential, and designated another 13 decisions informative. The three POP decisions are summarized below.

In Proppant Express Investments LLC v. Oren Technologies LLC, IPR2018-00914 (March 2019; Paper 38, precedential), the POP addressed discretionary joinder under §315(c). The POP held that (a) a petitioner may be joined to a proceeding in which it is already a named party, and (b) new issues may be added to an existing proceeding, irrespective of whether the petitioner is already a named party. The POP also advised that the one-year time bar under 35 USC §315(b) is one of several factors to consider when exercising its discretion.

In GoPro Inc. v. 360Heroes Inc., IPR2018-01754 (August 2019; Paper 38, precedential), the POP addressed the one-year time bar under § 315(b). It concluded that § 315(b)’s language, “served with a complaint alleging infringement” is plain and unambiguous. Thus, the service of a pleading alleging patent infringement triggers the one-year time period for filing an IPR petition under 35 U.S.C. § 315(b), regardless of whether the serving party lacked standing to sue or the pleading was otherwise deficient.

Notably, six days after the POP issued the GoPro decision, it also designated as precedential the decision in Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Chrimar Systems, Inc. IPR2018-01511 (PTAB Jan. 2019; Paper 11, designated precedential August 2019).. In that case, the PTAB held that that § 315(a)(1) bars institution of an inter partes review of a patent in which petitioner voluntarily dismisses its earlier civil action challenging the validity of that patent prior to filing the petition.  Continue reading

2019 PTAB Year in Review – Part II: NEW HOPE FOR PATENT OWNER AMENDMENTS

By Tom Engellenner
The en banc Federal Circuit decision in 2017 in Aqua Products v. Matel, 872 F. 3d 1290 (Fed. Circ. 2017) threw out the original USPTO rule that the patent owner had the burden of persuasion regarding patentability of claim amendments. The Aqua Products decision was based somewhat on a technicality – that USPTO had failed to engage in formal rule-making and, hence, its interpretation of the America Invents Act (AIA) was not entitled to deference.

For a while, it was not clear whether the USPTO would proceed with a formal rule-making process and try to maintain its rule on burden of proof.  However, early in 2019, the PTAB issued a “precedential” opinion in Lectrosonics, Inc. v. Zaxcam, Inc., IPR2016-01120 (Feb. 25, 2019) explicitly adopting the new practice of placing the responsibility on the petitioner who challenges a patent to also show that any new claims presented by the patent owner by amendment are invalid.

This was followed by proposed formal rules in October, 2019 codifying the Lectrosonics holding that the petitioner who initiates a patent challenge will not only have the burden of persuading the PTAB that a patent owner’s claims as issued are invalid but will also have the same burden with regard to new claims that the patent owner may present by amendment during the proceeding.  The USPTO is expected to finalize this rule shortly.

At least one patent owner that had initially had its motion to amend denied has taken advantage of the Aqua Products decision.  On remand from the Federal Circuit, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) has granted a motion to amend in a patent directed to methods of treatment using cabazitaxel, a taxane compound. Mylan Labs. Ltd. v. Aventis Pharma S.A., IPR 2016-00712, Paper 112 (Oct. 22, 2019).

The PTO also appears to be taking proactive steps to help patent owners navigate the amendment process. On March 15, 2019, a notice of a pilot program was published for “motion to amend practice and procedures in trial proceedings under the America Invents Act (AIA) before the PTAB.” Continue reading