Jaswant S. Pannu and Jaswant S. Pannu, M.D., P.A. (collectively Pannu) appeal the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida,
Pannu v. Storz Instruments, Inc.,
Background
In 1980, Pannu filed a patent application for an artificial intraocular lens, S/N 136,-243 (’243 application). An intraocular lens is аn artificial plastic lens that may be implanted in an eye to replace a natural lens. The ’243 application disclosed a round lens called an “optic” that focuses light on the retina, and two or more elements called “haptics” that are attached to the optic and contact internal tissue in the eye for the purpose of positioning and securing the optic. The haptics in Pannu’s application included “snag resistant” discs at the end. In 1981, Pannu filed a continuаtion-in-part application, S/N 261,953 (’953 application), based on the original ’243 application. The ’953 application added new matter, claiming a lens in which the hap-tics are “integrally molded” to the lens body, and the lens could be plaсed in either the anterior or posterior chamber of the eye. 1
Independent claim 1 of the ’953 application reads as follows:
A posterior chamber intraocular lens comprising:
a lens having a width and a thickness;
a retention loop including a flexible strand having a width and a thickness and such strand is joined at one end to thе lens and has an opposite free end;
and a snag resistant disc joined to the flexible strand’s free end;
said snag resistant disc having a width which is at least 3 times greater than the thickness of the disc, at least 3 times *1369 greater than the width of the flexible strand, and at least % as great as the width of the lens for smoothly guiding the free end of the flexible strand across an inner edge of an iris when moving said strand into and out of a posterior chamber of an eye;
said snag resistant disc lying in a plane sufficiently close to a plane of the lens so that both the disc and lens can fit into a posterior chamber behind an eye’s iris.
The examiner rejected claims 1-14 as obvious under 35 U.S.C. § 103 in light of four prior art references: U.S. Patent No. 4,159,546 (Shearing patent), a publication showing the “Lindstrom Centrex” lens, U.S. Patent No. 4,249,271 (Poler patent), and U.S. Patеnt No. 4,092,743 (Kelman patent). In response, Pannu filed a supplemental amendment that cancelled claims 1-7 and 10-14, added new claims 16-22, and modified claims 8 and 9 to be dependent upon claim 16. Independent claim 16 reads as follows:
An intraocular lens comprising:
a lens body;
at least two flеxible positioning and supporting elements integrally formed with said lens body and extending from the periphery of said lens body;
said elements defining a continuous, substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of said lens body, said arc curved toward said lens circumference; and
snag resistant means integrally formed on the free end of said elements for smoothly guiding the lens across eye tissue when implanting the lens.
Pannu raised six arguments for the pat-entability of claim 16 over the four рrior art references, including the distinction of “a continuous substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of the lens body ... which significantly enhance the easy insertibility of applicant’s lens and significantly reduce any possibility of snagging delicate eye tissue.” The examiner accepted Pannu’s arguments, and allowed claim 16 subject to minor amendments to set forth precisely the structural details of the haptics. Claim 16 issued as claim 1 of U.S. Patent No. 4,435,-855 (’855 patent) and reаds as follows:
An intraocular lens comprising:
a lens body;
at least two spaced flexible positioning and supporting elements integrally formed with said lens body as a one piece construction and extending radially outward from the periphery of said lens body;
said elements defining a continuous, substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of said lens body, said are curved toward said lens circumference and terminating in a free end spaced from said periphery; and
snag resistant means integrally formеd on the free end of said elements for smoothly guiding and positioning the lens across contacted eye tissue when implanting the lens,
said snag resistant means having an uninterrupted continuously smoothly curved outer periphery which merges with said free end and is substantially greater in size than the width of said flexible elements.
In 1985, Pannu filed an application for reissue of the ’855 patent. The supplemental reissue oath stated that Pannu “unduly and without deceptive intent narrowed the claims beyond what was necеs *1370 sitated by the applied prior art by describing the shape of the outwardly extending elements as defining ‘a continuous, substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of the lens body.’ ” The examiner allowed Pannu to delete “defining a continuous, substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of said lens body, said arc curved toward said lens circumference and terminating in a free end” from claim 1. However, the examiner required Pannu to insert аdditional limitations into the last section of the claim. The last section of claim 1 reads as follows with italics indicating additions and bracketing indicating deletions:
said snag resistant means having an uninterrupted, continuously smoothly curved outer periphery which merges with said free end and is [substantially] at least three times greater in [size] width than the width of said flexible elements, said snag resistant elements and said positioning and supporting elements being substantially coplanar.
The ’855 patent reissued as U.S. Patent No. Re 32,525 (’525 reissue).
Pannu filed suit against Storz, alleging that intraocular lenses sold by Storz infringed the ’525 reissue. Storz filed a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment of patent invalidity, and moved for summary judgment that the ’525 reissue improperly recaptures subject matter Pаn-nu surrendered in obtaining allowance of claim 1 of the ’855 patent. The court granted Storz’s motion for summary judgment of invalidity and Pannu appeals.
Discussion
“We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.”
Vanmoor v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
The recapture rule “prevents a patentee from regaining through reissue
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the subject matter that he surrendered in an effort to obtain allowance of the original claims.”
Clement,
With respect to the shape of the haptics, claim 1 of the ’525 reissue is broader than claim 1 of the original ’855 patent. Claim 1 of the ’855 patent limited the haptics to “a continuous, substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of said lens body, said arc curved toward said lens circumference.” Claim 1 of the ’525 reissue eliminated this limitation on the shape of the haptics. “A reissue claim that does not include a limitation present in the original patent claims is broader in that respect.”
Hester,
Pannu argues that even if the reissued claim is broader, it did not relate to subject mattеr surrendered during prosecution. This argument is without merit. As originally filed, none of the claims in the ’953 application limited the shape of the haptics. The examiner rejected claims 1-14 as obvious. In response to the rejection, Pannu filed a supplemental amendment canceling claim 1 and adding new independent claim 16. Claim 16 described the haptics as “defining a continuous, substantially circular arc having a diameter greater than the diameter of said lens body, said arc curved toward said lens circumference.” Pannu argued to the examiner, “no such particular shape is disclosed by the lenses of either Shearing or Lindstrom. In fact, Shearing teaches away from the concept of a continuous substantially circular arc supporting strand ... [and] the Lindstrom lens illustrates a supporting strand with a somewhat irregular, elliptical shape.” The addition of the “continuous, substantially circular arc” limitation to claim 16 and the statements made by Pannu to the examiner during prosecution of the ’855 patent limited the claim to exclude an interpretation that did not include a continuous, substantially circular arc.
See Southwall Techs., Inc. v. Cardinal IG Co.,
Pаnnu argues, however, that because the reissued claims were materially narrowed in other respects, the ’525 reissue
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avoids the recapture rule.
See Hester,
The “continuous, substantially circular arc” limitation related to the shape of the haptics. The narrowing aspect of the claim on reissue, however, was not related to the shape of the hаptics, but rather the positioning and dimensions of the snag resistant means. Therefore, the reissued claims were not narrowed in any material respect compared with their broadening. Furthermore, “if the patentee is seeking to recover subject matter that had been surrendered during the initial prosecution this flexibility of analysis is eliminated, for the prosecution history establishes the substantiality of the change and estops its recapture.”
Anderson v. Int’l Eng’g & Mfg., Inc.,
Conclusion
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The eye is considered to have two chambers separated by the iris. The anterior chamber lies between the back surface of the cornea and front surface of the iris. Attorneys' Dictionary of Medicine and Word Finder A-280 (1995). The posterior chamber is the space between the back surface of the iris and the front surface of the crystalline lens. Id. at P-280.
