Federal Circuit Scraps Point of Novelty for Design Patents
The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has changed the law of anticipation for design patents. The so-called "point of novelty" test was recently scrapped in a case handled by Darby & Darby. Representing Walgreens and its supplier, Darby litigator Mark P. Walters argued for the Court to bring its case law in line with another recent decision that had changed the law of design patent infringement, Egyptian Goddess v. Swisa, 543 F.3d 665 (Fed. Cir. 2008). "The Court's decision in Egyptian Goddess eliminated the point of novelty test for infringement, so it made sense that the same should happen for anticipation," Walters said. Writing for the majority, Judge Timothy Dyk agreed, saying "[i]t has been well-established for over a century that the same test must be used for both infringement and anticipation." The case is International Seaway Trading Corp. v. Walgreens, (2009-1237), and the patents-in-suit are U.S. Patent No. D529,263; D545,032, and D545,033.
Labels: design patent, Egyptian Goddess v Swisa, International Seaway Trading v. Walgreens, patent attorneys seattle, point of novelty
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