Under the rule of prosecution history estoppel, patent applicants who amend their claims during the course of patent prosecution assume a significant risk: namely, the risk that a court will later construe the changes as concessions that should be read to limit patent scope. This risk is exacerbated by strong evidentiary presumptions under which courts are to assume, unless the patentee presents sufficient evidence otherwise, that every change triggers estoppel, and that the resulting estoppel forfeits everything except that which the revised language literally describes. The justification for these presumptions is that, implemented in this fashion, prosecution history estoppel makes patent scope more predictable. In this Article, I argue t...
This comment explains the development and application of both laches and equitable estoppel defenses...
article published in law reviewWhen the Framers of the United States Constitution granted Congress t...
In the years before Congress passed the America Invents Act, patent litigation became exorbitantly e...
Under the rule of prosecution history estoppel, patent applicants who amend their claims during the ...
On November 29, 2000, the Federal Circuit retroactively reduced the value of nearly 1.2 million unex...
The doctrine of 'prosecution history estoppel' (PH estoppel) as developed in the United States has s...
This paper explains why the use of prosecution history estoppel to limit the doctrine of equivalents...
In the Festo decision, the Federal Circuit significantly changed the scope of the doctrine of equiva...
Last Term, in Festo Corporation v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabashuki Co., the United States Supreme C...
[Excerpt] “One of the most salient effects of patent prosecution history arises in the context of th...
The Supreme Court again began to delve into substantial patent issues by addressing the interplay be...
The common saying ¿hindsight is 20¿20¿ rings true in many different areas; in patent law specificall...
In almost every context, the Federal Circuit has used estoppel doctrines to provide protection to pa...
The Congress shall have the power to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing fo...
Marking is the act of placing a patent number on a product or its packaging. The doctrine of marking...
This comment explains the development and application of both laches and equitable estoppel defenses...
article published in law reviewWhen the Framers of the United States Constitution granted Congress t...
In the years before Congress passed the America Invents Act, patent litigation became exorbitantly e...
Under the rule of prosecution history estoppel, patent applicants who amend their claims during the ...
On November 29, 2000, the Federal Circuit retroactively reduced the value of nearly 1.2 million unex...
The doctrine of 'prosecution history estoppel' (PH estoppel) as developed in the United States has s...
This paper explains why the use of prosecution history estoppel to limit the doctrine of equivalents...
In the Festo decision, the Federal Circuit significantly changed the scope of the doctrine of equiva...
Last Term, in Festo Corporation v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabashuki Co., the United States Supreme C...
[Excerpt] “One of the most salient effects of patent prosecution history arises in the context of th...
The Supreme Court again began to delve into substantial patent issues by addressing the interplay be...
The common saying ¿hindsight is 20¿20¿ rings true in many different areas; in patent law specificall...
In almost every context, the Federal Circuit has used estoppel doctrines to provide protection to pa...
The Congress shall have the power to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing fo...
Marking is the act of placing a patent number on a product or its packaging. The doctrine of marking...
This comment explains the development and application of both laches and equitable estoppel defenses...
article published in law reviewWhen the Framers of the United States Constitution granted Congress t...
In the years before Congress passed the America Invents Act, patent litigation became exorbitantly e...