Lead Opinion
Opinion of the court filed PER CURIAM. Concurring opinion filed by RADER, Circuit Judge.
This case is the second appeal to this court in a patent litigation between Cross Medical Products, Inc. (Cross Medical) and Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc. (Medtronic). Cross Medical accuses Medtronic’s polyaxial screws of infringing U.S. Patent No. 5,474,555 (the '555 patent). In the prior appeal, this court set aside a permanent injunction issued by the United States District Court for the Central District of California and reversed the summary judgment of infringement and validity of claim 5 of the '555 patent in favor of Cross Medical. See Cross Med. Prods., Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc.,
Because Medtronic’s redesigned polyaxial screws do not infringe the asserted claims literally or under the doctrine of equivalents, this court reverses the grant of summary judgment of infringement of claim 5. On the redesigned screws, the district court should grant Medtronic’s motion for summary judgment of non-infringement. The remaining issues, which involve the validity of claim 7 and infringement of this claim by Medtronic’s original
I
This litigation began on February 4, 2003, when Cross Medical sued Medtronic for infringement of the '555 patent. Med-tronic denied infringement and counterclaimed seeking a declaration of non-infringement and invalidity. On September 28, 2004, the district court issued a permanent injunction after granting Cross Medical’s motions for partial summary judgment on validity and infringement of claim 5. Medtronic immediately filed an appeal with this court despite ongoing proceedings at the district court. First Appeal,
While the first appeal was pending, Medtronic redesigned its polyaxial screws in an attempt to avoid infringement of claim 5. In response, Cross Medical asserted that the redesigned screws still infringe claim 5 and that Medtronic’s original and redesigned screws infringe claim 7.
On the claim 5 issue, the district court found that Medtronic’s redesigned screws infringe under the doctrine of equivalents. Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 22. In reaching this finding, the district court determined that a narrowing amendment to claim 5 during prosecution was only “tangentially related” to the accused equivalent and thus not subject to an estoppel under Festo. Id., slip op. at 8-11; see Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co.,
After Medtronic submitted its initial brief in this appeal, this court issued its opinion overturning the first permanent injunction. See First Appeal,
This appeal overlaps considerably with the issues in the First Appeal. Because the First Appeal remanded several issues common to both injunctions, the parties agree that the second permanent injunction cannot stand. However, the parties dispute what issues, if any, remain for decision in this second appeal. Cross Medical asserts that the only issues remaining are: (1) whether the redesigned Medtronic screw meets the “thread-depth” limitation of claim 5 literally or under the doctrine of equivalents; and (2) whether the district court’s grant of summary judgment of non-infringement of claim 7 conflicts with this court’s findings with respect to claim 5 in the First Appeal. Br. of Pl. Appellee, 3, Cross Med. Prods., Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc., No. 05-1415 (Fed.Cir.2006) (Appellee Brief). Of these two issues, Medtronic argues that
II
With that backdrop, this court turns first to the claim 5 issue. The district court granted Cross Medical a summary judgment that Medtronic’s redesigned screws infringe. “This court reviews the district court’s grant or denial of summary judgment under the law of the regional circuit.” MicroStrategy, Inc. v. Bus. Objects, S.A.,
Having already concluded that Medtronic’s original screws infringe claim 5, the district court examined the redesigned screws for appropriation of the “thread depth” limitation as well as the rest of the claimed features. See Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 6. Specifically, claim 5 reads:
5. A fixation device for the posterior stabilization of one or more bone segments of the spine, comprising: at least two anchors and an elongated stabilizer comprising a rod having a diameter and a longitudinal axis, said anchors each comprising anchoring means which secure said anchors to said bone segment and an anchor seat means which has a lower bone interface opera-tively joined to said bone segment and an anchor seat portion spaced apart from said bone interface including a channel to receive said rod; and securing means which cooperate with each of said anchor seat portions spaced apart from said bone interface and exterior to the bone relative to said elongated rod, said seat means including a vertical axis and first threads which extend in the direction of said vertical axis toward said lower bone interface to a depth below the diameter of the rod when it is in the rod receiving channel, and said securing means including second threads which cooperate with the first threads of the seat means to cause said rod to bear against said channel through the application of substantially equal compressive forces by said securing means in the direction of the vertical axis and applied on either side along said longitudinal axis of said channel.
'555 patent, col. 8 11. 33-57 (emphasis added). On literal infringement, the district court determined that Medtronic’s redesign, which “replaces the threads below the top of the rod with a groove or ‘undercut[,]’ ” lacks thread forms and thus “does not literally meet the limitation requiring ‘threads’ extending below the top of the rod.” Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 6-7.
As described in the specification, the thread depth limitation corresponds to the anchor seat 23 shown in Figures 3 and 6 of the '555 patent and the threading thereon:
*1340 [[Image here]]
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The embodiments of Figures 3 and 6 show that the threads on the anchor seat 23 extend to a depth below the top surface of the rod 18 as claimed. Notably, this thread depth requirement was not in the '555 patent’s original application. Rather, the originally filed claim simply called for a “seat means including a vertical axis and first threads” without any particular limitation about the extent of the threading. The Examiner rejected this original claim, however, for lack of antecedent basis and lack of support in the specification (35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶¶ 1-2), for obviousness type double patenting over U.S. Patent No. 5,360,431, and for anticipation (35 U.S.C. § 102(b)) over U.S. Patent No. 4,805,602 (the '602 patent). In response, the Applicant amended the claim (originally numbered as claim 15) to recite:
15. (Amended) A fixation device for the posterior stabilization of one or more bone segments of the spine, comprising:
securing means which cooperate with each of said anchor seat portions spaced apart from said bone interface and exterior to the bone relative to said elongated rod, said seat means including a vertical axis and first threads which extend in the direction of said vertical axis toward said lower bone interface to a depth below the diameter of the rod when it is in the rod receiving channel, and said securing means including second threads which cooperate with the first threads of the seat means to cause said rod to bear against said channel through the application of substantially equal compressive forces by said securing means in the direction of the vertical axis and applied on either side along said longitudinal axis of said channel.
In the same filing, the Applicant also amended the specification to address the 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 1 rejection and submitted a terminal disclaimer to address the double patenting rejection. Thereafter, the Patent Office allowed the claim.
Medtronic apparently focused on this prosecution history in attempting to design around claim 5. Specifically, as noted by the district court, Medtronic altered its original screw design to terminate the corresponding threads at a position above the rod diameter. The district court agreed with Medtronic that the redesign took their screws outside the literal scope of claim 5. Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 7 (“The new design does not literally meet the limitation requiring ‘threads’ extending below the top of the rod.”). However, the district court still found the screws infringe claim 5 under the doctrine of equivalents’ function-way-result test. Id., slip op. at 11. In so holding, the district court rejected Medtronic’s argument that a Fes-to presumption barred application of the doctrine of equivalents:
[T]he rationale behind the amendment [to claim 5] was to adequately describe and enable a device, under § 112, in which the securing means could secure the rod without the use of a cap. The applicant was not attempting to over*1341 come prior art using an undercut, and the amendment did not relate to an undercut. Therefore, the rationale was no more than tangentially related to Med-tronic’s new screw design, in which threads extend part of the way toward the rod and an undercut extends to a depth below the top of the rod. Med-tronic’s new screw design is “beyond a fair interpretation of what was surrendered.” Festo,535 U.S. at 738 ,122 S.Ct. 1831 .
Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 10. Medtronic challenges this reasoning and seeks summary judgment of non-infringement both under literal infringement and equivalents.
A. Literal Infringement
Turning first to literal infringement, Medtronic replaced the threading that extends below the diameter of the rod in its original screws with an undercut that does not engage any surface on the corresponding set screw. Cross Medical characterizes this undercut as effectively a thread because it constitutes the root of an incomplete thread. The district court considered this argument by Cross Medical and properly rejected it as stretching the meaning of “thread” too far. Id., slip op. at 7 (rejecting Cross Medical’s argument that “the undercut is an ‘effective thread,’ which the parties agree is a complete thread, plus portions of an incomplete thread that are fully formed at the root but not at the crest”). As explained by the district court, the undercut in Medtronic’s screws is not a thread because no thread forms in the undercut to join the flanks of adjacent thread forms above the diameter of the rod. Id. Simply because the undercut appears adjacent to a thread form does not convert that independent structure into a thread. Thus, the district court properly found that this limitation only can be satisfied, if at all, under the doctrine of equivalents.
B. Infringement by Equivalents
Prosecution history estoppel prevents a patentee from recapturing under the doctrine of equivalents subject matter surrendered during prosecution to obtain a patent. See Festo,
On appeal, Cross Medical argues that the amendment to claim 5 was tangential or, in the alternative, that it was unforeseeable. This court reaffirms the principle that the tangential relation criterion for overcoming the Festo presumption is very narrow and finds that neither the narrow tangential rebuttal principle nor the foreseeability principle applies to this case.
As discussed in the Festo opinion, the tangentially related
criterion requires a patentee to demonstrate that “the rationale underlying the narrowing amendment [bore] no more than a tangential relation to the equivalent in question.” Festo VIII, 535 U.S. at 740,122 S.Ct. 1831 ,152 L.Ed.2d 944 . In other words, this criterion asks whether the reason for the narrowing amendment was peripheral, or not directly relevant, to the alleged equivalent.
Festo,
Cross Medical’s reliance on Insituform Technologies, Inc. v. CAT Contracting, Inc.,
In Insituform, this court stated that in an analysis to determine if an amendment is tangential, “[t]he question we must address is ‘whether the reason for the narrowing amendment was peripheral, or not directly relevant, to the alleged equivalent.’ ”
In this case, the prosecution history of the '555 patent shows a narrowing amendment that also “contains the equivalent in question.” Id. The '555 patent Applicant explained to the Examiner that:
the claims have ... been amended to define the anchor seat means having a channel and threads which cooperate with the securing means (i.e., the nut) so as to capture the stabilizer between the channel and the securing means since the ancor [sic] seat threads extend toward the channel to a depth below the top of the stabilizer when it is in the channel.
In other words, the prosecution history explains that the thread depth limitation was added to capture the manner in which the stabilizer aspect of the invention operated and thereby overcome the 35 U.S.C. § 112 rejections. Thus, the accused equivalent, which does not include threads extending “to a depth below the top of the stabilizer” and correspondingly does not capture this aspect of the invention relates to the amendment as shown even by the applicant’s own statements. For this reason, the district court erred in reliance on the tangential rebuttal principle to avoid the doctrine of equivalents.
As an alternative, Cross Medical argues that the alleged equivalent was unforeseeable at the time of the amendment and thus the Festo presumption could be overcome with this rebuttal criterion. See Festo,
Even Cross Medical implicitly recognized this fact in its literal infringement argument. Namely, Cross Medical suggests that an “undercut” was known in the art to serve effectively as a thread. Of course, this contention also means that the ordinary artisan would have considered an undercut as a foreseeable way to operate the invention- — meaning that the patent drafter had an obligation therefore to include an undercut within the scope of the claim if it intended the invention to extend to that foreseeable means of using the invention. See Ranbaxy Pharm., Inc. v. Apotex, Inc.,
C. Summary
For the foregoing reasons, this court concludes that Cross Medical cannot satisfy its burden of overcoming the Festo presumption on either the tangentially related criterion or the foreseeability criterion. Because Medtronic’s redesigned screws do not literally infringe claim 5 and Festo bars capturing these screws under the doctrine of equivalents, the district court should have granted summary judgment of non-infringement in favor of Medtronic under both literal infringement and infringement by equivalents regarding this claim.
III
Turning next to the claim 7 infringement issue, the district court found that “Medtronic’s old and new screw designs do not infringe the limitation of claim 7 requiring an ‘anchor seat including external threads.’ ” Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 17. As discussed below, the district court properly granted summary judgment of non-infringement of claim 7 on Medtronic’s redesigned screws. However, because the district court’s grant of summary judgment of non-infringement of claim 7 on Medtronic’s original screws is called into question by this court’s treatment of similar limitations in claim 5 in the First Appeal, this court vacates this aspect of the district court’s summary judgment grant and remands for further proceedings consistent with the First Appeal.
A. Redesigned Screws
While not identical to claim 5, claim 7 contains similar limitations beyond the scope of Medtronic’s redesigned screws. Specifically, claim 7 reads:
7. A device for the stabilization of one or more bone segments, comprising: at least two anchors and a rod having a diameter, said anchors each comprising screw means, an anchor seat, and a nut, said anchor seat including external threads and a channel to receive said rod and having a rod contacting surface in the bottom of the channel and said threads extending toward the rod contacting surface to a thread run-out, the distance between the rod contracting surface and the thread run-out being less than the diameter of the rod; and said nut including top and bottom surfaces and a relatively constant diameter through bore having threads which mate with the threads of the anchor seat and said nut being exterior to said rod and tightening down toward the rod whereby said bottom surface applies to compressive force to said rod.
'555 patent, col.8 1.62-col. 10 1.4 (emphasis added).
Notably, the district court concluded Medtronic’s redesigned screws do not meet the limitation “said threads extending toward the rod contacting surface to a thread run-out, the distance between the
B. Original Screws
Turning next to the original screws, the parties dispute whether this court has jurisdiction to entertain this issue at all. Medtronic argues that a cross-appeal is a necessary predicate to considering this issue and, in its absence, this court lacks jurisdiction. Cross Medical argues that this court may consider the issue as an “alternative” basis upon which the district court could have issued its second permanent injunction. As outlined below, this court agrees with Medtronic that it should not address the merits of the issue but also agrees with Cross Medical that the district court should have the opportunity to reconsider this question in light of the First Appeal.
On the jurisdictional inquiry, this court need not consider whether the district court could have issued the second permanent injunction on. some other grounds. Rather, this court reviews the district court’s judgment with an eye to whether an alternative basis might support that decision. See Laitram Corp. v. NEC Corp.,
While this court does not address the merits of this issue, the First Appeal certainly calls into question some of these claim 7 issues. Thus, this court agrees with Cross Medical that this aspect of the district court’s summary judgment grant must be vacated and remanded for reconsideration in light of the First Appeal. After reconsideration by the district court, the parties may then seek further appellate review of these issues, if necessary.
TV
The district court also determined that claim 7, like claim 5, is not anticipated, obvious, or indefinite. In the First Appeal, this court affirmed the district court’s holdings on anticipation and indefiniteness with respect to claim 5, but held that issues of material fact remained for adjudication with respect to obviousness. See First Appeal,
V
In conclusion, summary judgment of non-infringement on all asserted claims
COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, REVERSED-IN-PART, VACATED-IN-PART, and REMANDED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur with the result in this case. I write separately to address further the issue of prosecution history estoppel of claim 5 of U.S. Patent No. 5,474,555 (the '555 patent).
The district court found that Cross Medical successfully rebutted the presumption of prosecution history estoppel for claim 5 of the '555 patent based on tangentiality. Cross Med. Prods., Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc., SA CV 03-311-GLT, slip op. at 10 (C.D.Cal.2005) (Trial Court Opinion ). With that finding, the district court proceeded to determine that Medtronic’s redesigned screws (with internal threads that stopped above the top of the rod) infringe under the doctrine of equivalents. Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 22. As noted in the majority opinion, the '555 patent applicant specifically amended its claims in response to an examiner’s rejection. The amendment specified that the first threads extend deeper than the top of the rod received in the channel of the seat. Majority Opinion, pp. 1339-40. The examiner allowed the application based on this amendment. Id. at 1340.
This prosecution history became very important when Medtronic attempted to design around claim 5. As this court has noted, Medtronic altered its original screw design to terminate the corresponding threads at a position above the rod diameter. Id. at 1340. Medtronic chose this new design with an eye to the applicant’s narrowing amendment. Nonetheless, the district court determined that this narrowing amendment to claim 5 during prosecution was only “tangentially related” to the accused equivalent and thus not subject to an estoppel. Trial Court Opinion, slip op. at 8-11; see Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co.,
This court made the tangential relation criterion for overcoming the Festo presumption very narrow. Festo,
In my view, the tangential rebuttal principle exacerbates the policy deficiencies of the doctrine of equivalents. Upon invoking tangentiality, the patentee has already admitted that the equivalent falls within the scope of surrendered subject matter. Further, if the case permitted, any patentee would invoke the primary “foreseeability” rebuttal factor. Thus, an invocation of “tangentiality” often admits that the equivalent was both within the scope of the surrender and foreseeable at the time of prosecution. In other words, the patent drafter could have claimed the surrendered and foreseeable technology, but declined to do so.
Furthermore, the tangentiality rebuttal principle, by its nature, undermines principles of public notice. This rebuttal principle operates because the patentee has expounded very different purposes for its narrowing amendment than those applicable to the tangential equivalent. The prosecution record thus does not address this “tangential” equivalent (which nonetheless was surrendered and was known and claimable during prosecution). In other words, the patentee gets a reward — coverage under the doctrine of equivalents— precisely because its explanations did not give the public any notice of the unclaimed and surrendered subject matter. The public might have believed it could practice technology that the patentee surrendered in prosecution. Moreover, the public might have reasonably undertaken to practice that foreseeable technology because the patentee could have claimed it but declined to do so. Even beyond these principles, the public might have consulted the prosecution history and learned that the patentee gave no explanation for its surrender of this foreseeable technology. Thus, a diligent study of the patent and its prosecution history would give the public every reason to believe that the “tangential” subject matter would fall outside the scope of the invention and within the public domain. The basic principles of public notice would suggest these unclaimed and surrendered “tangential” technologies have no conceivable basis to expect patent protection.
This case is a classic example of the tangentiality principle running counter to principles of public notice. Medtronic had suffered an injunction. It deliberately sought to design around the patented technology — a response that patent law encourages. State Indus. Inc. v. A.O. Smith Corp.,
In any event, this case reaffirms that the tangential rebuttal principle remains very narrow. See Biagro W. Sales, Inc. v. Grow More, Inc.,
