« January 2006 | Main | March 2006 »

February 27, 2006

The CAFC's Lawman Decision: Another Blow to Design Patent Enforcement

The CAFC's ruling in Lawman Armor Corp. v. Winner Int'l LLC, 77 USPQ2d 2017 (Fed. Cir. 2006) ), made life much more difficult for the design patent plaintiff. As discussed in the Shape Blog posting of February 22nd (here), the court held that, in applying the "point of novelty" test for design patent infringement, a patentee cannot combine a series of points of novelty into a further point of novelty.
Winner.jpg
U.S. Design Patent D-357,621
SLIDING HOOK PORTION OF A VEHICLE
STEERING WHEEL LOCK ASSEMBLY

There are two distinct tests for design patent infringement, both of which must be satisfied by the patentee: the "ordinary observer" test and the "point of novelty" test.

"The 'ordinary observer' test requires comparison of the two designs from the viewpoint of the ordinary observer to 'determine whether the patented design as a whole is substantially the same as the accused design.' [citations omitted] Under the 'point of novelty' test, a court must determine whether 'the accused device ... appropriate[s] the novelty in the patented device which distinguishes it from the prior art.'"
The Lawman decision concerned the second test. Plaintiff-patentee Lawman listed eight points of novelty for its steering wheel lock design, but it did not challenge the district court's ruling that these eight points were shown in prior art patents. Instead, Lawman argued that the combination of these eight non-novel points in a single design was itself a ninth point of novelty. As noted in the Shape Blog posting of last week, the Board rejected that approach and affirmed the district court's grant of summary judgment of noninfringement.:

"This argument is inconsistent with, and would seriously undermine, the rationale of the 'points of novelty' test. *** If the combination of old elements shown in the prior art is itself sufficient to constitute a 'point of novelty' of a new design, it would be a rare design that would not have a point of novelty. The practical effect of Lawman's theory would be virtually to eliminate the signficance of the 'points of novelty' test in determining infringement of design patents, and to provide patent protection for designs that in fact invlove no significant changes from the prior art."

The Lawman decision is very puzzling, since there is no inherent reason why the overall design of a product could not itself be novel and nonobvious, even though each element of the design might be found in some piece of prior art. For example, suppose one built a car with pieces from eight different vehicles. Couldn't the overall design be inventive, even though the individual parts were not?

Moreover, if there is no novelty in the Lawman design, shouldn't the patent have been declared invalid? Why even get to the infringement issue?

The January 27th Shape Blog posting commented on an article by Perry J. Saidman and Allison Singh in which the authors lamented the demise of the Supreme Court's "ordinary observer" test (Gorham Co. v. White, 81 U.S. (14 Wall.) 511 (1871)) in design patent infringement cases. The requirement of a Markman hearing in design patent cases, they argued, was a fundamental error that has "mortally wounded" the Gorham test.

The Lawman decision is another body blow to the design patent plaintiff. As stated above, to prove infringement, the patentee must pass both the "ordinary observer" test and the "point of novelty" test. The Markman hearing requirement made the first test much more difficult. The Lawman decision has done the same to the "points of novelty" test.

Postscript: The Lawman decision also directly contradicts the CAFC's rulings in Avia Group Int'l, Inc. v. L.A. Gear California, Inc., 7 USPQ2d 1548 (Fed. Cir. 1988), and L.A. Gear Inc. v. Thom McAn Shoe Co., 25 USPQ2d 1913 (Fed. Cir. 1993).

February 24, 2006

Brand History - Mountain Dew

I love nicely done brand history sites.  And I love Mountain Dew.Capture2-24-2006-12.18.34 PM

So I did a quick search.  The official history is here.

The site is fun and interesting, but a little short on the details that I like to see.

I'll keep drinking, though.

February 22, 2006

CAFC Clarifies "Point of Novelty" Test for Design Patent Infringement

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled today that, in applying the "point of novelty" test for design patent infringement, a patentee cannot combine a series of points of novelty into a further point of novelty. Lawman Armor Corp. v. Winner Int'l LLC, Appeal No. 05-1253 (February 22, 2006)

Winner.jpg
U.S. Design Patent D-357,621
SLIDING HOOK PORTION OF A VEHICLE
STEERING WHEEL LOCK ASSEMBLY

Plaintiff-patentee Lawman listed eight points of novelty for its design, but it did not challenge the district court's ruling that these eight points were shown in prior art patents. Instead, Lawman argued that the combination of these eight non-novel points in a single design was itself a ninth point of novelty. The Board rejected that approach:

"This argument is inconsistent with, and would seriously undermine, the rationale of the 'points of novelty' test. *** If the combination of old elements shown in the prior art is itself sufficient to constitute a 'point of novelty' of a new design, it would be a rare design that would not have a point of novelty. The practical effect of Lawman's theory would be virtually to eliminate the signficance of the 'points of novelty' test in determining infringement of design patents, and to provide patent protection for designs that in fact invlove no significant changes from the prior art."

The CAFC therefore affirmed the district court's summary judgment of non-infringement.

February 21, 2006

Design Discussion Blogs

Design Boom

Design Observer

Be A Design Group

Core 77

February 14, 2006

Expired Design Patents

I just found a blog that covers expired design patents, "The Frankie Files." Interesting...

February 13, 2006

Two-Bottle Tote: How Would You I-Protect It?

Get it? I-Protect? IP protect?

651G_BuiltNYBYObag.jpg

From Built NY. Website here.

Copyright? Too utilitarian.
Utility patent? Maybe, but watch out if you want to get a ...
Design patent? Sure. There certainly are non-functional design features.
Trademark? You'd better be ready to prove secondary meaning.

[See US Trademark Registration No. 3,026,873]
[Also marked "patent pending"].

February 10, 2006

Trivia question: how could you protect it?

Client comes to you with pants having a strategically placed hole in the seat thereof, this hole allowing the top of one's "cleavage" to show. How can you protect it (intellectual property)?

fancy_pants.jpg

[Via here (warning, partial spoiler to the trivial question)]

February 09, 2006

Cube Table

cubetable_lg1.jpg

by Jellio, Inc.

February 08, 2006

Safety Cone for Warning of Slippery Conditions (U.S. Design Patent D-514,464)

banana.jpg

February 07, 2006

Gillette Razors

Super Bowl Sunday officially ushered in the age of the 5-blade razor (if you missed the commercial, 265_Sht1_006_Blade2view some fusion flash here).

Mach3Seems like just yesterday the Mach3 was all the rage.

Three blades?  Man, that's so yesterday.

 

 

 

Capture2-7-2006-2.54.05 PMIf you have trouble with that, imagine shaving with an earlier Gillette razor that had but one blade (granted, it had two edges).  That artifact resembles a rake more than it does a modern razor.

 

TUPPERWARE Brand Flat Out containers

105-B-FlatOut.jpg

February 06, 2006

Paperboard Makers Battle over "Mottled Pattern" Trademark Registration

Brownsville Specialty Paper Products, Inc. has filed a petition for cancellation of Fibermark, Inc.'s trademark registration for a mark consisting of "a representation of the consistent mottled pattern shown on the surface of the goods."

Fibermark.gif

The mark is the subject of U.S Trademark Registration No. 3,038.726, issued on January 10, 2006, for "paperboard provided to others for making report, document and notebook covers, and for making binders and folders." The Registration issued under Section 2(f).

96_9_5.jpg

Brownsville alleges that the Fibermark "mottled pattern" mark is, inter alia, functional, generic, indefinite, and non-distinctive.

February 03, 2006

Moose antler ceiling fan (US D435,644)

moose.jpg

Honda S-90

MM_1965_Super_90_cycle.jpg

circa 1967

Blade Arm for a Ceiling Fan (U.S. Design Patent D-514,219)

shark.jpg

February 02, 2006

SONY Cyber-shot M2 Digital Camera

Sony%20M2-776905.JPG

Beaver Tail Headband (U.S. Design Patent D-513,834)

beaver.jpg

February 01, 2006

Eddie Bauer down coat

eddie_bauer.jpg
USPN D119,112

Traveler Guitar's Escape Bass

Escape-Bass-lg.jpg
link