MEMORANDUM OPINION
This patent infringement suit involves four patents, three of which the plaintiff asserts against the defendant and the fourth which the counterclaiming defendant asserts against the plaintiff. The motion at bar concerns the patent asserted in the counterclaim, namely U.S. Patent No. 4,931,042 (the “042 patent”). Specifically, the matter before the Court is defendant’s motion, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 256, to correct the inventorship of the 042 patent by adding the name of a previously omitted third inventor. For the reasons that follow, the motion must be granted.
I.
This is an unusual tale of multiple inventorship. The dramatis personae consists of four patents, four companies and three individuals. Plaintiff, Applied Medical Resources Corporation (“Applied”), is a California company engaged in the business of making and selling medical devices. Applied is the owner of the three patents alleged in the complaint to be infringed by defendant, namely U.S. Patent Nos. 5,209,737, 5,308,336 and 5,385,533.
Defendant, United States Surgical Corporation (“Surgical”), is a New York corporation also engaged in the manufacture and sale of certain medical devices. It was first the exclusive licensee, and is now the owner of, the 042 patent. It is also the owner of two additional patents, U.S. Patent Nos. 4,902,280 (the “280 Patent”) and 5,030,206, (the “206 patent”) that it initially alleged in counterclaims were infringed by Applied. Those counterclaims have been withdrawn by stipulation pursuant to Rule 41, Fed.R.Civ.P.
EndoTherapeuties Corporation (“Endo”) is a California company engaged in development of a line of single-use precision instruments for endoscopic surgical procedures. In 1992, Endo became Surgical’s wholly owned subsidiary.
The fourth company is a Massachusetts consulting firm owned by, and consisting of, two of the principal players in this tale, William Holmes and Peter Costa, the named co-inventors of the 042 patent. Holmes and Costa worked as consultants for Endo in the effort to develop new product designs. The third and final individual player in the drama is Jack Lander, a former Surgical employee and, by Surgical’s lights, the unnamed inventor of the 042 patent. 1 Lander is also the named inventor of Surgical’s 206 and 280 patents, patents Applied was initially accused of infringing.
The four patents in this suit all relate to certain aspects of trocars, which, in general, are devices used in surgical procedures to establish an entry passage into the body for diagnostic or surgical purposes. More particularly, the trocars at issue combine a cannula, through which surgical instruments can pass, with an obturator, a sharp-pointed rod that can puncture the wall of the body cavity. These trocars are used to facilitate surgical techniques, such as laparoscopy, that enable surgeons to examine and operate within a body cavity, typically the abdomen, with minimally invasive impact on the patient. Applied’s three patents relate to trocar seal
In November 1985, Surgical and Endo, which were then unrelated entities, entered into a Joint Research and Development Confidential Disclosure Agreement (“the CDA”) for the purpose of sharing confidential information about products in development. The CDA was designed to enable the parties to explore cooperative development of medical devices to be used with certain of Endo’s endoscopic devices.
It also appears that the parties’ ultimate goal was the licensing to Surgical of both jointly developed products and products developed by Endo. To this end, the parties executed a License Agreement in June 1986, pursuant to which, inter alia, Endo granted Surgical an exclusive worldwide license to practice Endo’s trocar related inventions and developments. The scope of the license encompasses patented inventions and unpatented know-how. Included among the License Agreement’s terms was a provision requiring Surgical to pay Endo $100,000 for Endo’s existing engineering drawings, tooling and component parts relating to trocars. This was done so that Surgical would be entitled to manufacture the licensed products, since Endo planned to cease its trocar manufacturing after the execution of the License Agreement. Apart from an initial payment, the License Agreement provides for Surgical to pay royalties for different terms depending on whether a product is covered by U.S. Patents. For products not covered by U.S. patents, the royalty period is twelve years. For products covered by U.S. patents, the royalty period extends until the last to expire of the applicable U.S. patents. At the time the parties entered into the License Agreement, the parties apparently contemplated that the second royalty period would apply to trocar products, as Endo, by then, had already applied for two patents covering its trocar technology, both of which issued not long after the License Agreement was executed. 3
The story of the inventorship of the 042 patent begins in 1985, prior to the CDA and the License Agreement, when Holmes and Costa, working as consultants for Endo, conceived of a locking or latching device for a trocar. In a trocar, an obturator is used to pierce the body wall and thereby create an entry point for the cannula. This obturator consists of a rod with a sharp-pointed tip at one end. When the tip is not in use, it is covered by a safety shield to prevent inadvertent puncturing of the body cavity. Holmes and Costa used interacting camming surfaces to create a mechanism that locks the safety shield over the tip of the obturator when the tip is not in use, yet also allows the surgeon to retract the safety shield and use the sharp trocar tip when necessary.
By the end of 1985, a number of drawings and at least one model or prototype had been developed reflecting Holmes’ and Costa’s concept. Then, in early 1986, these drawings and prototype were disclosed to Surgical pursuant to the CDA.
4
At Surgical, Lander, then a product designer there, reviewed these drawings and prototype without knowing that Holmes and Costa were the originators of the technology disclosed. Concluding that the Holmes and Costa device was not adequate in certain respects, Lander in April 1986 conceived and reduced to practice an alternative locking mechanism. Lander’s locking mechanism, unlike the Holmes and Costa embodiment, employs a metal leaf spring as a means for controlling the safety shield’s movement. Surgical, as the assignee of Lander’s rights to this invention, applied for and received the 206 patent covering it.
In early 1987, Surgical began to market a trocar product known as the Surgiport®, which embodied Lander’s leaf spring mechanism. Later in 1987, Endo decided to seek patent protection for the trocar design developed by Holmes and Costa. At this time, so far as this record discloses, Endo and its consultants, Holmes and Costa, were entirely unaware of Lander’s leaf spring locking development and the related Surgical patent application. Thus, in October 1987, when Endo filed the patent application that ultimately ripened into the 042 patent, only Holmes and Costa were listed as the inventors. Yet, this application, as well as the 042 patent itself, disclosed and claimed a trocar that included a leaf spring mechanism. And, it now appears virtually certain that the leaf spring mechanism disclosed in the 042 patent is essentially identical to the mechanism invented by Lander. 5
As certain as it is that the leaf spring latching mechanism disclosed and claimed in 042 patent came from Lander, it is just as uncertain precisely how this came about. It is undisputed that Holmes & Costa developed a latch mechanism using overlapping cam surfaces, not a leaf spring as invented by Lander. It is also undisputed that neither Holmes and Costa, nor Endo was aware of Lander and his work.
How, then, did Lander’s leaf spring mechanism find its way into the 042 patent? Surgical contends this occurred when, in 1987, Surgical’s Surgiport® trocar was marketed generally and samples almost certainly came into Endo’s possession. From this essentially uneontroversial fact, Surgical contends that it is appropriate to infer that Endo’s patent lawyer merely incorporated the leaf spring latch into the 042 patent application mistakenly believing that it was an embodiment of the Holmes and Costa invention. For their part, Holmes and Costa testified that they recognized that the leaf spring mechanism represented in the 042 patent figures was not their exact design, but they believed it represented “the patent illustrator’s interpretation” of their design and “an implementation” of their work. After several years of prosecution, the 042 patent issued on June 5,1990.
II.
A patent must be filed in the name of all of its inventors.
See
35 U.S.C. §§ 111, 116;
Stark v. Advanced Magnetics, Inc.,
Given the admission of Holmes and Costa regarding their unfamiliarity with the leaf spring, it appears that the 042 patent does not name every true inventor of that patent’s claims. Nonetheless, the 042 patent is not necessarily invalid. This is so because in limited circumstances the Patent Act permits the correction of non-fraudulent errors of inventorship in issued patents,
see
35 U.S.C. § 256,
6
thus “[serving] the public policy of
[b]efore the enactment of § 256, incorrect inventorship of an issued patent would simply invalidate the patent. The purpose of § 256 was to provide a remedy for a bona fide mistake in inventorship.
Stark,
Section 256 correction is liberally allowed, provided that the inventorship error occurred without deceptive intent.
See Coleman v. Dines,
1. Lander was an Inventor
The expert testimony of Dr. Martin Schecht, an engineering professor at MIT, provides clear and convincing evidence that the leaf spring mechanism disclosed in the 042 patent is essentially identical to the mechanism invented by Lander in 1986. Professor Scheeht’s affidavit reflects a meticulous and thorough comparison of the leaf spring latch configurations disclosed in both Lander’s laboratory notebook and the 206 patent on one hand, with the leaf spring latch disclosed in the 042 patent on the other. The comparison convincingly demonstrates that the two latches are the same. As a result, Professor Schecht concludes that Lander contributed the leaf spring latch configuration to the trocar invention disclosed and claimed in the 042 patent. This testimony is convincing evidence that Lander is a joint inventor of the 042 patent.
2. The Omission was an Error
Although correction pursuant to § 256 is limited by the language of that section to “errors”, the statute itself provides no definition of “error”, nor have courts construed the term in this context. “Error” is defined by Webster’s, in relevant part, as “an act involving an unintentional deviation from truth or accuracy” and “an act that through ignorance, deficiency, or accident departs from or fails to achieve what should be done.” See Webster’s Third International Dictionary Unabridged, at 772 (1993). Thus, the term appears to cover both unintended results and deliberate choices made on the basis of erroneous information. 7
This definition, applied here, points persuasively to the conclusion that the omission of Lander was erroneous. Specifically, while Holmes and Costa deliberately chose to name only themselves on the 042 patent, they made that decision through ignorance, as
This conclusion is not inconsistent with the named inventors’ admission that they were aware that the leaf spring mechanism was not their exact design. The undisputed record reflects that Holmes and Costa considered the leaf spring mechanism depicted by the patent illustrator in the 042 patent application to be a permissible interpretation or embodiment of their invention. They were neither aware of Lander’s contribution, nor aware of claims in the patent application that they considered beyond the scope of their claimed invention. Holmes and Costa mistakenly and erroneously omitted a joint inventor from the 042 patent. This “error”, if made without deceptive intent, is amenable to § 256 correction.
3. The omission Did Not Result from Deceptive Intent
Section 256 allows the correction of a patent only where an inventorship error arises without “deceptive intention”. With respect to this issue, there is a threshold question of whose “intent” is relevant — the omitted inventor’s intention or the named inventors’ intention. The language of § 256 provides that an inventor not named in an issued patent may seek correction where “such error arose without any deceptive intention on his part.” (emphasis added). Notwithstanding this language, which suggests that it is the omitted inventor’s intention that counts, district courts construing § 256 have uniformly and sensibly required the absence of deceptive intent on the part of any true inventor, omitted or named.
See, e.g., Stark v. Advanced Magnetics, Inc.,
The “deceptive intention” language limits § 256 correction to innocent errors in the nonjoinder or misjoinder of inventors.
See, e.g., McMurray v. Harwood,
[t]he statute cannot be used as a vehicle for substituting inventors to rectify conspiracy and fraud in the application, and it does not authorize the correction of grossly negligent mistakes, made by parties having full notice of the facts and their legal significance, or deliberate mistakes attributable to errors of judgment.
60 Am.Jur.2d
Patents §
857 (1987) (citations omitted). These principles, applied here, compel the conclusion that Lander was omitted from the 042 patent without deceptive intention. While no party involved in the patent application that led to the 042 patent recalls precisely how the leaf spring mechanism came to be incorporated into the 042 patent application, the record reflects that Lander’s contribution of this element was unknown. Holmes and Costa believed that the leaf spring was an embodiment of their invention, a mere interpretation of their claims by the patent illustrator. Further, Thomas Ciotti, the patent attorney responsible for the prosecution of the 042 patent, declares by affidavit that while he cannot recall the specifics of the preparation of the 042 patent application, neither he nor any attorneys in his supervision intended to deceive the Patent and Trademark Office by incorrectly identifying the inventors of the
Applied contends that there were factors that provided possible motivation for the omission of Lander from the 042 patent. This contention is unpersuasive. The relationship between, Holmes, Costa, Endo, Lander and Surgical negated any motivation that Holmes and Costa might have had to omit Lander from the 042 patent. And the only relevant record evidence points persuasively to the conclusion that the omission of Lander resulted from ignorance of his contribution to the 042 patent application among the parties prosecuting the 042 patent.
Applied further contends that Surgical’s inability to identify how Lander’s contribution was incorporated into the 042 patent is fatal to § 256 correction in light of Surgical’s clear and convincing burden. This too is unpersuasive. Where, as here, the named inventors are ignorant of the contributions of an omitted inventor, the record might often be silent on the precise events leading to the incorporation of the omitted inventor’s ideas. In other words, where inventors are aware of a contribution and choose not to name the contributor on the patent, the reasons and intent in that decision will likely be documented or recalled. But where an unnamed inventor’s contribution is unknown to those involved in the patent application process, the decision to omit the unknown inventor will not be reflected in the record because no such decision was ever made; the error is one of knowledge, not judgment. In these circumstances, the failure to identify precisely how Lander’s contribution came to be included in the 042 patent without proper inventorship attribution is not fatal to § 256 correction. To the contrary, in the facts of this case, the testimony of the participants in the 042 patent prosecution, combined with an absence of any motive on anyone’s part to omit Lander from the 042 patent, provides clear and convincing evidence that Lander’s omission as a named inventor was without “deceptive intention.”
In sum, Surgical has established by clear and convincing evidence that Lander was a true inventor of the 042 patent, that his omission from that patent was an error, and that this error arose without deceptive intention on the part of Lander or the named inventors. As a result, a § 256 correction is appropriate.
III.
In the alternative, Applied contends that Surgical should be barred from correcting the inventorship of the 042 patent for equitable reasons, given that Surgical has known for more than five years about the nonjoinder of Lander on the 042 patent application and only moves now to correct the patent.
Although § 256 correction is liberally allowed to prevent avoidable forfeiture of property rights, “equity disfavors undue and prejudicial delay by a person who may have an interest in the property of another.”
See Stark,
The facts of this case do not warrant barring § 256 correction of the 042 patent on the basis of laches or estoppel. Such equitable defenses require the dismissal of a claim where there is (i) “unreasonable and unexcused delay in bringing a claim,” and (ii) “material prejudice to the defendant as a result of the delay.”
Advanced Cardiovascular,
Holmes and Costa assigned all of their rights in the 042 patent to Endo. Endo, in turn, not only executed a Licensing Agree
In sum, Surgical has established by clear and convincing evidence that Lander was a true inventor omitted from the 042 patent as a result of error without deceptive intention. And a § 256 correction is not barred by the equitable principles of laches or estoppel. Accordingly, Surgical’s motion for correction of the 042 patent to name Lander as a joint inventor must be, and hereby is, granted.
An appropriate Order has issued.
Notes
. Lander was employed as a product designer for Surgical from September 1984 through June 1987. He is currently employed by Wentworth Laboratories of Danbury, Connecticut as a project engineer.
.Surgeon operating on or examining a body cavity such as the abdomen inflates that cavity with gas. This inflation separates the cavity wall from the internal organs, thereby creating space within which cameras and instruments inserted through the cannula can be maneuvered. Seals incorporated in a trocar’s cannula and housing permit the insertion and manipulation of instruments in the body cavity without resulting in an unacceptable loss of internal pressure.
. These patents were issued as U.S. Patent Nos. 4,601,710 and 4,654,030.
. And, of course, within months Surgical also gained an exclusive license to use this technology pursuant to the Licensing Agreement.
. This is established by the careful analysis of Surgical's expert, Martin Schecht, an MIT engineering professor. By affidavit, Professor Schecht provides persuasive evidence for his conclusion that Lander contributed the leaf spring latch configuration to the trocar invention disclosed and claimed in the 042 patent.
. Section 256 provides that:
Whenever through error a person is named in an issued patent as the inventor, or through error an inventor is not named in an issued patent and such error arose without any deceptive intention on his part, the Commissioner may, on application of all the parties and assignees, with proof of the facts and such other requirements as may be imposed, issue a certificate correcting such error.
The error of omitting inventors or naming persons who are not inventors shall not invalidate the patent in which such error occurred if it can be corrected as provided in this section. The court before which such matter is called in question may order correction of the patent on notice and hearing of all parties concerned and the Commissioner shall issue a certificate accordingly.
35 U.S.C. § 256.
. This definition of "error” is consistent with the Federal Circuit’s interpretation of that term elsewhere in the Patent Act. For example, § 251 authorizes the correction of a patent through reissue if that patent contains "error” without "deceptive intent". In that section, as here, "error” is not defined, but courts have interpreted the term to cover instances of "inadvertence, accident, or mistake”. See
Hewlett-Packard Co. v. Bausch & Lomb, Inc.,
. In
Stark,
the district court certified this threshold question, namely, whether an innocent omitted inventor may seek correction if the named inventors acted with deceptive intent, for appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
Stark,
