On remand from this court, the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, on summary judgment, determined that Biocrest Manufacturing, L.P., Stratagene Holding Corporation, and Stratagene, Inc. (collectively Stratagene) infringed Invitrogen Corporation’s (Invitrogen’s) U.S. Patent No. 4,981,797 (issued Jan. 1, 1991) (the ’797 patent), and that the ’797 patent was not invalid for indefiniteness, although it was invalid because of public use under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b).
Invitrogen Corp. v. Biocrest Mfg.,
No. A-01-CA-167-SS (W.D.Tex. Feb. 12, 2004)
(In-vitrogen II).
Although not specifically enumerating all of the counterclaims on which judgment was obviated due to its holding on invalidity, the trial court rendered final judgment sufficient to give this court jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1) (2000).
See Pandrol v. Airboss,
I.
The ’797 patent involves the introduction of recombinant DNA molecules into receptive E. coli cells to improve the cells’ “competence,” i.e., their ability to take up and establish exogenous DNA and replicate this DNA as they multiply. See ’797 pat *1378 ent, col. 1, 11. 11-13. A cell that accepts alien DNA is called a transformable cell.
Claim 1 of the ’797 patent claims:
A process for producing transformable E. coli cells of improved competence by a process comprising the following steps in order:
(a) growing E. coli in a growth-conductive medium at a temperature of 18 C to 32 C;
(b) rendering said E. coli cells competent; and
(c) freezing the cells.
’797 patent, col. 10, 11. 27-32 (emphasis added). Stratagene makes thirty-four competent E. coli cell lines by a process “including the steps of incubating cells at 37 C, growing the cells in a fermenter at 26 C, and freezing the cells.”
Invitrogen sued Stratagene for infringement on March 12, 2001. The district court construed the claims and then granted Stratagene’s summary judgment motion of non-infringement. Invitrogen appealed to this court, disputing the lower court’s construction of both “improved competence” in the preamble and “growing” in step (a). This court decided that the trial court had correctly construed the term “improved competence.”
Invitrogen Corp. v. Biocrest Mfg.,
On remand, the trial court properly applied this court’s construction of “growing” by stating that “the temperature of the medium in which the E. coli cells are grown” before step (a) “does not matter.” The district court then found literal infringement of claims 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 11, 14, and 15 of the ’797 patent; decided that Claim 1 was not indefinite under 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 2; and found the claims invalid under the public use provision of 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). The court dismissed all other motions as moot. See Invitrogen II.
II.
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
determining whether the evidence in the record raises any genuine dispute about material facts. In this review, all reasonable factual inferences are drawn in favor of the non-moving party.
See In re Cruciferous Sprout Litig.,
The Federal Circuit applies its own law with respect to issues of substantive
*1379
patent law and certain procedural issues pertaining to patent law, but applies the law of the regional circuits on non-patent issues.
Institut Pasteur v. Cambridge Biotech Corp.,
The parties do not dispute that Invitrogen used the claimed process before the critical date, in its own laboratories, to produce competent cells. Invitrogen did not sell the claimed process or any products made with it. The record also shows that Invitrogen kept its use of the claimed process confidential. The process was known only within the company. Strata-gene does not dispute that the claimed process was maintained as a secret within Invitrogen until some time after the critical date.
35 U.S.C. § 102(b) states that a person shall be entitled to a patent unless
“the invention was ... in public use or on sale
in this country, more than one year prior to the date of the application for patent in the United States.” 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) (2000) (emphasis added). In
Pfaff v. Wells,
the Supreme Court considered the meaning of the phrase “the invention” in § 102(b).
Pfaff v. Wells Elecs., Inc.,
In
Pfaff,
the Court specifically considered the “on sale” portion of the § 102(b) statutory bar language, but in so doing, the Court noted that both the “on sale” and “public use” bars were based on the same policy considerations.
Id.
at 64,
This court’s decisions in
Netscape Communications Corp. v. Konrad,
The district court reasoned that Invitro-gen had used the claimed process in its own laboratories, more than one year before the ’797 application was filed, to “further other projects” beyond development of the claimed process and to acquire a commercial advantage. Invitrogen admits that it used the claimed process in its own laboratories before the critical date to grow cells to be used in other projects within the company. The district court determined that use of the invention in Invitrogen’s general business of widespread research generated commercial benefits. The district court examined the totality of the circumstances and found that this use was “public.” See Invitrogen II. Invitrogen argues, however, that this secret internal use was not “public use” under the applicable test, because it neither sold nor offered for sale the claimed process or any product derived from the process, nor did it otherwise place into the public domain either the process or any product derived from it. Under the proper test for public use under § 102(b), these facts do not erect a bar.
The basic tenet of U.S. patent law is that an original inventor gains an
*1381
exclusive right to the invention.
U.S. Const.
Art. 1, § 8, cl. 8. Thus, an inventor’s own work cannot be used to invalidate patents protecting his own later inventive activities unless,
inter alia,
he places it on sale or uses it publicly more than a year before filing. 35 U.S.C. § 102(b); see also
In re Katz,
In some cases, this court has determined that a use before the critical period was not public even without an express agreement of confidentiality.
See, e.g., Moleculon Research Corp. v. CBS, Inc.,
The classical standard for assessing the public nature of a use was established in
Egbert.
In
Egbert,
the inventor of a corset spring gave two samples of the invention to a lady friend, who used them for more than two years before the inventor applied for a patent.
Egbert,
As the Supreme Court pointed out in Pfaff, supra, secrecy of use alone is not sufficient to show that existing knowledge has not been withdrawn from public use: commercial exploitation is also forbidden. Invitrogen’s invention was not given or sold “to another,” or used to create a product given or sold to another, and was maintained under a strict obligation of secrecy. Without more, these circumstances are insufficient to create a public use bar to patentability.
The Supreme Court decided
Electric Storage Battery Co. v. Shimadzu,
While there are instances in which a secret or confidential use of an invention will nonetheless give rise to the public use bar, this is not such a case. In
Metallizing Engineering Co. v. Kenyon Bearing & Auto Parts Co.,
III.
Stratagene argues that it does not infringe the ’797 patent because its cells do not have “improved competence” as required by the patent’s preamble, although it admits that it practices each and every element of Claim 1, and does so in the claimed order. To settle this question, the court ordered tests on each of Stratagene’s thirty-four cell strains, to determine whether they exhibited “improved competence.” The tests compared cells grown at 37 C, rendered competent, then frozen, with cells grown at 37 C, rendered competent, but not frozen, and with cells prepared using the claimed process. Invitroi gen’s expert supervised these tests. The tests showed that twenty-eight strains made using the Stratagene process exhibited enhanced competence, five exhibited decreased competence, and one exhibited no change.
Stratagene argues that those tests, presented in the form of an affidavit from the Invitrogen expert, are inadmissible. Stratagene contends that the affidavit lacks credibility because the expert did not conduct the tests personally, and thus does not have sufficient “personal knowledge” of the results. To the contrary, the district court carefully considered the admissibility of this evidence, and concluded that the expert had obtained sufficient personal knowledge through review of the records of the tests. This court detects no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision to admit that evidence.
Stratagene also argues that the tests raise a genuine issue of material fact about the improved competence of Strata-gene’s samples, because some of the samples did not exhibit improved competence. Again, to the contrary, a great majority of Stratagene’s samples did exhibit improved competence. The claim requires that the quantity of E. coli cells that take up and establish exogenous DNA to be generally increased. The tests show that general increase. In addition, Stratagene’s own inventor had recorded in his notebooks that he found “improved competence” when the cells of several cell lines were grown within the claimed range. The record contains no evidence that contradicts the general increase in competence observed in the tests. Therefore, the trial court properly resolved this issue as well.
IV.
Stratagene also argues that the ’797 patent is invalid for indefiniteness, objecting to the phrase “improved competence.” A claim is definite if “one skilled in the art would understand the bounds of the claim when read in light of the specification.”
Personalized Media Communications, LLC v. ITC,
*1384
Stratagene further argues that it would have had to practice the claimed process in order to determine if it was infringing, even though “[t]he primary purpose of the definiteness requirement is to ensure that the claims are written in such a way ... that interested members of the public ... can determine whether or not they infringe.”
Oakley, Inc. v. Sunglass Hut Int’l,
V.
Finally, Stratagene asks this court to consider its affirmative defenses of enablement, anticipation, and obviousness, as alternate grounds for invalidity. Final judgment by the district court included an order that invalidated the ’797 patent based on public use under § 102(b), and on no other ground. The district court declared moot the other invalidity claims and made no final judgment on them. Therefore, under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1) (final judgment rule), this court declines to assert jurisdiction to consider an appeal on these issues.
This court reverses the trial court’s judgment of invalidity due to public use, affirms the trial court’s partial summary judgment of infringement and denial of Stratagene’s motion for summary judgment of invalidity due to indefiniteness, and remands the case for further proceedings.
COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
AFFIRM-IN-PART, REVERSE-IN-PART, and REMAND
Notes
Kinzenbaw v. Deere & Co.,
Deere's sales branch, acting through local independent dealers, made the invention available to farmers (called "customers” in Deere’s internal memoranda) for commercial use. Deere instructed the dealers to keep the units moving: "If one customer is not going to be using it for a few days and another customer could, please move it.” In 1973, the farmers used the planters for 1,000 hours in five states, and in 1974, for 500 hours in 11 states. By the end of 1974, 40,000 acres had been planted with the machines.... [TJhree years after it began using the invention, Deere filed the application for its patent.
Id. at 389-90. No wonder this court sustained a finding that Deere's wide-spread ac- *1382 tiviües were “primarily for commercializing the apparatus” and therefore public. Id.
