Can a Patent Be Valid and Invalid at the Same Time? – Bloomberg Law

Posted: May 9, 2021 at 11:54 am

In quantum physics, Schrdingers cat refers to a thought experiment where a cat is simultaneously both alive and dead. But law is binarya statement is either true or false; a litigant either wins or loses; and a patent is either valid or invalid. Or is it?

In a fascinating 2019 ruling in Sanofi-Aventis v. Mylan, the federal district court in New Jersey refused, initially, to find a pharmaceutical patent invalid despite a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office finding of invalidity in an inter partes review (IPR) between the same parties.

Sanofi held that collateral estoppel which permits a ruling from one case to be applied in a separate casewas inappropriate where the standards of proof for invalidity were different (i.e., only a preponderance of evidence in the PTO, versus clear and convincing evidence in federal courts).

Ultimately, the Sanofi court did accept the invalidity determination, but only after the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the PTOs decision. That appellate ruling, however, merely affirmed that the PTO had correctly found invalidity applying the lower standard.

In 2020, the Northern District of California, in Cisco Sys. v. Capella Photonics Inc., did apply collateral estoppel to find patent invalidity where the Federal Circuit had already affirmed an IPR invalidity finding. The Cisco court distinguished Sanofi as having occurred before appellate review of the IPRciting XY LLC v. Trans Ova Genetics, where the Federal Circuit held that collateral estoppel applies once the appeals court affirms the patent office on invalidity.

Interestingly, the XY case garnered a dissent from Circuit Judge Pauline Newman who pointed to the different standards in IPRs as a reason not to apply collateral estoppeleven after appellate affirmance of an IPR holding. Newman further noted that Supreme Court jurisprudence has repeatedly held that collateral estoppel is not to be automatically applied.

These decisions reveal tensions as to the collateral estoppel effect of IPR decisions in federal district court litigations.

Modern day collateral estoppel law derives from a landmark patent case. In Blonder-Tongue Laboratories Inc. v. University of Illinois Foundation, the Supreme Court held that a defendant in federal court may assert patent invalidity based on collateral estoppel if a different defendant invalidated the patent in an earlier federal court case.

Before Blonder-Tongue, patentees could in theory continue to assert a patent against different defendants after an invalidity rulingand thus a patent could be both effectively valid and invalid.

Nonetheless, as Judge Newman pointed out in her dissent in XY, the Blonder-Tongue case did not require automatic application of collateral estoppel but instead required the trial court to examine whether there were any reasons not to apply estoppele.g., if the issues being litigated in the two cases were not the same. And the Supreme Court has explained, in B&B Hardware Inc. v. Hargis Indus., that issues are not identical if the second action involves application of a different legal standard, even though the factual setting of both suits may be the same.

Citing B&B Hardware, Sanofi held that the different legal standards in IPRs preclude estoppel. The different standards have also led the Federal Circuit to hold, in Novartis AG v. Noven Pharms. Inc., that an IPR properly may reach a different conclusion [from a prior court ruling finding no invalidity] based on the same evidence.

These rulings seem discomforting. Our jurisprudence is premised upon treating like cases alike. How can a patent be both valid and invalid at the same time (even in the face of the same prior art)?

Indeed, the purpose of collateral estoppel is largely to avoid the anomaly of the same issue being adjudicated differently in different courts. Yet, are they really like cases if different standards are being applied? How can the patent office remove a property righta patentusing a lower standard of proof and then effectively impose that conclusion on an Article III court that has a higher standard of proof?

If and when these issues reach the Supreme Court they may provide a vehicle for refining the doctrine of collateral estoppel, as well as for considering whether the IPRs lower standard of proof for eliminating a property right is actually constitutionally permissiblean issue that the court has not specifically addressed when it has upheld IPRs in the face of other constitutional challenges.

For now, we live with the potential for Schrdingers patents"simultaneously valid and invalid during the time between IPR invalidation and appellate review. Like their quantum-physics feline counterparts, Schrdingers patents are curious creatures cloaked in uncertainty.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. or its owners.

Write for Us: Author Guidelines

Jason Lief is a co-founder of Lief Parke LLP in New York where he practices patent and IP litigation and counseling.

Read this article:

Can a Patent Be Valid and Invalid at the Same Time? - Bloomberg Law

Related Posts