Abbott Laboratories and Mitsubishi-Tokyo Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Formerly Known as Tokyo Tanabe Co., Ltd.) v. Dey, L.P. And Dey, Inc.

287 F.3d 1097
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 2002
Docket01-1374
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 287 F.3d 1097 (Abbott Laboratories and Mitsubishi-Tokyo Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Formerly Known as Tokyo Tanabe Co., Ltd.) v. Dey, L.P. And Dey, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbott Laboratories and Mitsubishi-Tokyo Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Formerly Known as Tokyo Tanabe Co., Ltd.) v. Dey, L.P. And Dey, Inc., 287 F.3d 1097 (Fed. Cir. 2002).

Opinion

PROST, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs Mitsubishi-Tokyo Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Abbott Laboratories appeal the decision of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois granting defendants Dey L.P. and Dey, Inc. summary judgment of noninfringement of U.S. Patent No. 4,897,839 (“the '839 patent”). Because the district court improperly precluded plaintiffs from relying on the doctrine of equivalents to prove infringement, we vacate the judgment of noninfringement and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

I

Tokyo Tanabe Company, Ltd., now known as Mitsubishi-Tokyo Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and its exclusive United States licensee, Abbott Laboratories, (collectively “Abbott”) sued Dey, L.P. and Dey, Inc. (collectively “Dey”) for infringement of the '839 patent and U.S. Patent No. 4,338,301 (“the '301 patent”). These patents relate to a lung surfactant composition for treating respiratory distress syndrome in premature babies. . The '301 patent, filed on May 21, 1980, represents the work of Drs. Fujiwara, Tanaka and Takei in developing a surfactant having the desirable properties of rapid spreading in the lungs and of reducing ultra-alveolar surface tension. Claim 1 of the '301 patent reads as follows:

Surface active material containing phos-pholipid, neutral lipid, total cholesterol, carbohydrate, protein and water, which material is obtained from lung tissue of a mammal with or without further phos-pholipid, characterized in that the phos-pholipid content is 75.0-95.5%, the neutral lipid content is 1.8-14.0%, the total cholesterol content is 0.0-3.0%, the carbohydrate content is 0.1-1.5%, the protein content is 0.5-5.0% and water content is 1.7-6.0%, all based on the dried weight of said material, the minimum and maximum surface tension ranges of the material estimated by Wilhelmy’s method wherein the material is added dropwise to the surface of physiological saline in an amount of 0.3-0.8 jxg per square centimeter of surface area thereof being 2.1-8.6 dynes/cm and 48.2-58.0 dynes/cm when surface areas are 21.0 cm2 and 45.6 cm2 respectively.

'301 patent, col. 17, 1. 59 col. 18, 1. 6 (emphasis added).

The '301 patented surfactant was based on a composition labeled “TA-546.” 'Dr. Tanaka, one of the three inventors of the '301 patent, “continued confirmatory studies on TA-546” and “diseover[ed] that several important properties (i.e., surface tension-reducing capacity, spreadability over a liquid surface, and adsorbability to a gas-liquid interface) of TA-546 can be enhanced by increasing the relative amount or content of free fatty acids to 1.0-27.7% based on the total weight of TA-546.” '839 patent, col. 1, 11.36^4 (emphasis added). TA-546 contained less than 1.0% free fatty acid, although the '301 patent makes no mention of this fact. Id. at col. 1,11. 37-38; '301 patent, col. 5, Table I. Dr. Tana- *1100 ka’s discovery of the benefits of adding free fatty acids led him to file a new patent application on March 4, 1982, four months before the '301 patent issued on July 6, 1982. This new application issued as the '839 patent on August 9, 1983. Claim 1 of the '839 patent reads:

A surface active material comprising (1) phospholipid, neutral fat, total cholesterol, free fatty acids, carbohydrate, protein and water, all of which are obtained from the lung tissue of a mammal, and (2) optionally at least one additional component selected from the group consisting of a phosphatidylcholine, a neutral fat and a free fatty acid, characterized in that the overall phospholipid content is 68.6 90.7%, the overall neutral fat content is 0.3-13.0%, the total cholesterol content is 0.0-8.0%, the overall free fatty acid content is 1.0-27.7%, the carbohydrate content is 01-2.0%, the protein content is 0.0-3.5%, and the water content is 21-5.2%, all based on the dry weight of the material, the surface tension of the material as measured at 15°-25°C. by Wilhelmy’s method in which the material is added dropwise to the surface of physiological saline in an amount of 0.3-0.8 |i.g per square centimeter of the surface area thereof being 30.1-47.5 dynes/cm when the surface area is 54.0 cm2.

'839 patent, col. 17, ll. 13-31 (emphases added).

The application for the '839 patent was filed as a separate and independent application — not as a continuation, divisional or continuation-in-part of the '301 application, even though the '301 application was pending at the time the '839 application was filed, and the applications shared common subject matter, a common inventor, and the same assignee. The same examiner also examined both the '839 and '301 applications. He initially rejected the pending claims of the '301 patent as being, among other things, prima facie obvious in light of three prior art articles. March 17, 1981 Examiner’s Action at p. 2. In response to this rejection, the applicants argued as follows:

The inventors of the invention covered by this application have studied the suggestions of these three references and discovered, through experimentation, that only a surface-active material having the chemical composition claimed and disclosed at Table I at page Ip of the application under the heading “Composition of the Material” have the property of rapid spreading and of ultra-alveolar surface tension reduction. The results obtained are caused by the particular and novel surface-active agent isolated, the method of using this agent on the ailment HMD, and the method of isolating the particular surface-active material.
Accordingly, it is believed all of the claims define a patentable invention over the cited references, whether these references are taken separately or in combination.

July 1, 1981 Amendment at pp. 8-9 (emphasis added). After issuing a final rejection based on 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶¶ 1 and 2, which was overcome by a September 3, 1981 Amendment After Final Rejection, the examiner issued a notice of allowance on December 17,1981. 1

The '839 application was filed on March 4, 1982, approximately three months after the examiner allowed the claims of the '301 application but before the '301 patent *1101 had issued. The examiner allowed the claims of the '839 application “because this application is an improvement over previously allowed patent claims; and no prior art was found which anticipates or makes obvious the instant claims.”

The '839 and '301 patents have been involved in prior litigation before our court. In Forest Laboratories, Inc. v. Abbott Laboratories, 239 F.3d 1305, 57 USPQ2d 1794 (Fed.Cir.2001), this court considered whether the district court erroneously granted Forest a judgment of non-infringement as a matter of law following a jury verdict of infringement. We affirmed the district court’s decision because the jury’s verdict was not supported by substantial evidence.

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287 F.3d 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-laboratories-and-mitsubishi-tokyo-pharmaceuticals-inc-formerly-cafc-2002.