United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit or "CAFC" is the national court where patent appeals are heard. Hierarchically, it is above the District Courts and below the Supreme Court.
Since its creation in 1982, the CAFC has massively expanded the scope for patenting business methods and software. The CAFC replaced the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.[1]
Contents
Some important cases
- Cybersource v. Retail ruling by US CAFC on 16 Aug 2011 - math on a computer can be patentable
- in re Bilski (2008, USA) - en banc
- KSR v. Teleflex (2007, USA)
- Microsoft v. AT&T (2006, USA)
- eBay v. MercExchange (2006, USA)
- AT&T Corp. v. Excel Communications Inc. (1999, USA)
- State Street v. Signature Financial Group (1999, USA)
- In re Beauregard (1995, USA) - which led to patent drafters coining the term Beauregard claims
- In re Lowry (1994, USA)
- In re Alappat (1994, USA) - en banc
Pro-patent tendencies
- See also: Pro-patent bias in courts
Many judges on the CAFC worked previously in private patent practice. For evidence of strong pro-patent tendencies in this demographic, see: patent lawyers. The notable pattern is that their experience is systematically in litigation, and managing large patent portfolios, not in public interest defence or in protecting those who don't have patents against those who do.
- Pauline Newman: From 1969 to 1984, Judge Newman served as director, Patent, Trademark and Licensing Department, FMC Corp. [...] She served as patent attorney
- Alan D. Lourie : He was formerly Vice President, Corporate Patents and Trademarks, and Associate General Counsel of SmithKline Beecham Corporation. [...] he had been President of the Philadelphia Patent Law Association, a member of the Board of Directors of the American Intellectual Property Law Association (formerly American Patent Law Association), treasurer of the Association of Corporate Patent Counsel, and a member of the board of directors of the Intellectual Property Owners Association.
- Richard Linn: ...served as a Patent Examiner at the United States Patent Office from 1965 to 1968
- Kimberly A. Moore: has written and presented widely on patent litigation. She co-authored a legal casebook entitled Patent Litigation and Strategy
- ...
En banc and panel decisions
The CAFC usually gives "panel decisions" which are written by a panel of three CAFC judges. The court can also take a case "en banc", which means all active judges of the CAFC participate in writing the opinion (or opinions). The purpose of en banc cases is to set firmer case law on a particular issue.
Judges
(May not be 100% up to date.)
The number of judges on the CAFC varies with time. The maximum seems to be eighteen.[reference needed]
Present
- Chief Judge Randall Ray Rader - described as the most pro-swpat of the Court's members[2]
- William Curtis Bryson
- Raymond Charles Clevenger III
- Timothy B. Dyk
- Arthur J. Gajarsa
- Richard Linn
- Alan David Lourie
- Haldane Robert Mayer
- Kimberly Ann Moore
- Pauline Newman
- Kathleen M. O'Malley
- S. Jay Plager
- Sharon Prost
- Jimmie V. Reyna
- Alvin Anthony Schall
Past
- James Lindsay Almond, Jr.
- Glenn Leroy Archer, Jr.
- Phillip Benjamin Baldwin
- Marion Tinsley Bennett
- Jean Galloway Bissell
- Arnold Wilson Cowen
- Oscar Hirsh Davis
- Daniel Mortimer Friedman
- Shiro Kashiwa
- Don Nelson Laramore
- Howard Thomas Markey
- Paul Redmond Michel
- Jack Richard Miller
- Philip Nichols, Jr.
- Helen Wilson Nies
- Giles Sutherland Rich
- Byron George Skelton
- Edward Samuel Smith
Related pages on ESP Wiki
- USA patents courts and appeals
- US Supreme Court
- Case law in the USA
- Court cases and lawsuits
- How to submit an amicus brief in the USA
- Category:Court rulings by US CAFC
External links
- http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/
- http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/judgbios.html
- United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, Wikipedia
- United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, Wikipedia
News selection
- The Federal Circuit, Not the Supreme Court, Legalized Software Patents, 3 Oct 2012, Timothy B. Lee
- How a rogue appeals court wrecked the patent system, 30 Sep 2012, Timothy B. Lee
- Does not compute: court says only hard math is patentable, Aug 2011, Timothy B. Lee
References
- ↑ "Guest Post: Origins of the Clear and Convincing Standard". http://www.patentlyo.com/patent/2010/10/guest-post-origins-of-the-clear-and-convincing-standard.html.
- ↑ "The role of software patents in the patent reform debate (comments section)". http://opensource.com/law/13/9/software-patents-reform. "The principle supporter within the judicial system of the idea that all software is patentable is Chief Judge Rader"