Carl B. Bai appeals from the summary judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York that L & L Wings, Inc.’s MAGIC CATCH game does not infringe claim 1 of Bai’s U.S. Patent 4,017,076.
See Bai v. L & L Wings, Inc.,
No. 95 Civ. 10824 (LMM),
*1352 BACKGROUND
Bai is the inventor and owner of the ’076 patent directed to a “target game.” He asserted that Wings’s MAGIC CATCH target game infringes claim 1 of his patent. MAGIC CATCH is similar to the invention of claim 1, but has one primary difference. While the patent discloses and claims a “hemispherical” glove as shown below,
[[Image here]]
the MAGIC CATCH’s glove is saucer- or Frisbee ©-shaped. In other words, the plastic backside of the MAGIC CATCH glove is largely flat in the middle, but curved on the ends. At issue in this case is whether the limitation “hemispherical” excludes Wings’s largely flat product.
The patent application as originally filed had the following three claims that are relevant'here:
1. A target game including: a glove; a sheet of fabric material mounted on the glove and extending across the front face thereof to constitute a target for a missile thrown thereagainst.
2. The target game defined in claim 1, in which the glove is formed of a rigid plastic material and has a dish shape.
3. The target game defined in claim 2, in which the sheet of fabric material is mounted on the glove in spaced relationship therewith so as to present a resilient surface which is deflectable inwardly when struck by the missile.
The examiner rejected all the claims, particularly dependent claim 3, on obviousness grounds over a combination of four patents: Muchnick, U.S. Patent 3,953,030; Craig, U.S. Patent 1,633,926; Lemelson et ah, U.S. Patent 3,857,566; and Hartel, U.S. Patent 3,378,-260. Specifically, the examiner stated that it would have been obvious to combine the dish-shaped structure disclosed in the Hartel patent with the “target” disclosed in the Lemel-son patent, and that because the Lemelson target is hand-held, it is a kind of glove that can be substituted for the gloves disclosed in the Muchnick and Craig patents. In response, Bai canceled claims 2 and 3 and amended claim 1 to incorporate the claim 2 and 3 limitations and to add the limitation that the glove was “hemispherical.” 1 Bai remarked that he was amending claim 1 to “specifically and expressly recite the structural details” of his invention, noting its “particular configuration.” He distinguished the gloves disclosed in Muchnick and Craig as having different structures and functions from the amended claim, and distinguished the Lemelson target as not having a glove. Bai did not address the Hartel patent, but summarily stated that he believed the other references cited by the examiner were irrelevant. The examiner then allowed amended claim 1, which reads as follows:
1. A target game including: a glove formed of a hemispherical dish-shaped rigid plastic member, a strap mounted *1353 on the rear side of the plastic member to enable the glove to be held on the palm of the hand of a player; a sheet of fabric material mounted on the glove and extending across the front face of the dish-shaped rigid plastic member to constitute a target for a missile thrown thereagainst, said sheet of fabric material being mounted on the plastic member in spaced relationship with the inner surface thereof so as to present a resilient surface which is deflectable inwardly when struck by the missile.
(emphasis added).
Bai filed suit against Wings for patent infringement. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the question of infringement, focusing in their briefs on the term “hemispherical” and also addressing the prosecution history estoppel presumption established by the Supreme Court in
Warner-Jenkinson v. Hilton Davis Chem. Co.,
DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Conroy v. Reebok Int’l, Ltd.,
Determining whether a patent claim has been infringed involves two steps: (1) claim construction to determine the scope of the claims, followed by (2) determination whether the properly construed claim encompasses the accused structure.
See, e.g., Cole v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.,
A claim of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents may be decided on summary judgment. As the Supreme Court recently stated:
where the evidence is such that no reasonable jury could determine two elements to *1354 be equivalent, [the] district court [is] obliged to grant partial or complete summary judgment- Of course, the various legal limitations on the application of the doctrine of equivalents are to be determined by the court.... [I]f prosecution history estoppel would apply or if a theory of equivalence would entirely vitiate a particular claim element, partial or complete summary judgment should be rendered by the court, as there would be no further material issue for the jury to resolve.
Warner-Jenkinson,
520 U.S. at - n. 8,
Bai argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment of no literal infringement. Bai maintains that the court adopted a construction of the term “hemispherical” that encompasses devices that are “concave and symmetrical about their center[s],” and that no reasonable jury could find that MAGIC CATCH was not so constructed. Wings responds that Bai misquotes the district court’s construction of the term “hemispherical,” and that no reasonable jury could find that MAGIC CATCH literally infringed under the district court’s construction.
We agree with Wings. While the court did quote Bai’s description of the claimed glove as “concave and symmetrical about its center,” the court did not adopt this language as part of its claim construction.
See Bai
Bai next argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment of non-infringement under the doctrine of equivalents. Bai contends that MAGIC CATCH infringes the ’076 patent under the doctrine of equivalents and that prosecution history estoppel does not apply. Bai maintains that he added the “hemispherical” limitation merely to clarify the structure of the invention. Bai argues in the alternative that the Wamer-Jenkinson presumption does apply and was rebutted by a subsequent interference proceeding in which the interference examiner determined that the term “hemispherical” was immaterial to the count and thus unrelated to patentability.
Wings responds that Bai clearly added the term “hemispherical” to overcome the prior art rejection based on the Hartel reference, not for clarification. Wings argues that Bai could not have added that term for clarification because it actually misdescribes the preferred embodiment, which does not disclose a half-spherical glove. Wings contends that *1355 the interference proceeding is not part of the prosecution history because the interference was terminated, and in any case would not effect the conclusion that Bai added the term “hemispherical” to overcome prior art, because the interference examiner never decided the scope of claim 1.
When determiiiing whether prosedution history estoppel applies to limit the doctrine of equivalents, a court must examine the reason why an applicant amended a claim.
See Warner-Jenkinson,
520 U.S. at -,
What
Warner-Jenkinson
did address was the situation in which the prosecution history fails to disclose a reason for a claim amendment. In that case, the patent applicant responded to a prior art rejection by adding a pH range to his claim. Because the examiner cited prior art relevant to the higher, but not the lower, end of the range, the addition of the upper pH limit clearly responded to the prior art rejection, but the addition of the lower pH limit did not. Thus, the record did not disclose the reason for the addition of the lower pH limit.
See
Warner
-Jenkinson,
520 U.S. at -,
In this case, the reason for the "hemispherical” amendment is clear from the record. The examiner made only one rejection; he stated that the prior art, specifically referring to the Hartel patent which discloses a dish-shaped glove, rendered obvious the combination of a target, a glove, and a dish shape. Bai responded, inter alia, by adding the limitation “hemispherical” to the glove element. Thus, the term “hemispherical” was clearly an attempt by Bai to differentiate his invention over the Hartel patent. That Bai did not specifically address the Hartel patent in his remarks to the examiner does not alter our conclusion because it is clear that the “hemispherical” limitation directly addressed the citation of this reference.
Bai’s boilerplate remark to the examiner that he amended his claims to “specifically and expressly recite the structural details” of his invention does not affect our conclusion. Bai’s assertion that this language somehow conveys to the examiner his intent to add the term “hemispherical” for clarity purposes is unpersuasive. There is no evidence, and Bai does not argue that there is such evidence, that clarity was a problem with his claims. There was no lack of clarity, and no rejection under Section 112. Prior art was the problem. Moreover, Bai’s remark to the examiner that he amended his claim to recite a “particular configuration” buttresses our conclusion that the “hemispherical” amendment was a narrowing amendment that served to distinguish that “particular configuration” over the prior art. Because we conclude that the prosecution record clearly shows that the reason behind the addition of the “hemispherical” limitation was to overcome prior art, prosecution history estoppel conclusively applies. The Warner-Jenkinson presumption does not apply because the reason for amendment was readily apparent from the prosecution record. Consequently, Bai’s arguments attempting to rebut the application of prosecution history estoppel are irrelevant to our analysis.
Bai’s argument that the deletion of the term “hemispherical” from the interference *1356 count indicates that the earlier insertion of that term into the claim was not made to overcome a rejection on the ground of unpa-tentability of the claim is also not persuasive. As indicated above, it is clear to us that the term “hemispherical” was inserted to overcome the prior art rejection. The subsequent action of the examiner in the interference did not undo that fact. It merely responded to the motion by the opposing party to broaden the count, not the claim, for purposes of the interference, presumably to enable the opponent to present proof of priority with respect ■ to subject matter broadly defined to encompass interfering subject matter, including that which was not hemispherical. The reformulation of the interference count was therefore not a determination that Bai’s claim was allowable over the prior art without the term “hemispherical.”
Bai also argues that the amendment could not have been made to overcome prior art because it was not necessary to overcome the prior art rejection. We disagree. It is now too late in the game for us to analyze whether Bai’s addition of the term “hemispherical” was necessary to gain allowance of his claim. When an applicant disagrees with the examiner’s prior art rejection and fails to prevail by argument, he has two choices: either to amend the claim or to appeal the rejection. He may not both make the amendment and then challenge its necessity in a subsequent infringement action on the allowed claim. Bai made his choice and amended the claim.
See Warner-Jenkinson,
520 U.S. at-n. 7,
The remaining issue is the scope of estoppel. The district court concluded that prosecution history estoppel limited Bai to products that are hemispherical in shape, and held that MAGIC CATCH thus did not infringe claim 1.
See Bai,
CONCLUSION
Because the trial court properly granted summary judgment of noninfringement, we
AFFIRM.
Notes
. Bai also amended the claim to add "a strap mounted on the rear side of the plastic member to enable the glove to be held,” but this limitation is not at issue in the present appeal.
