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Unless overruled by a Supreme Court case, Federal Circuit decisions can dictate the results of both patent prosecution and litigation as they are universally binding on all United States district courts and the United States Patent and Trademark Office. An incomplete list of United States Supreme Court patent case law can be found here.
Concerning the issue of obviousness as applied to patent claims. Microsoft v. AT&T: 550 U.S. 437: 2007: Related to international enforceability of U.S. software patents. Quanta v. LG Electronics: 553 U.S. 617: 2008: Patent exhaustion and its applicability to certain types of method patents.
Harvard College v. Canada (Commissioner of Patents): patent of higher lifeforms (CA, 2002) Honeywell v. Sperry Rand (US, 1973) Hotchkiss v. Greenwood (US, 1850) Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd v ZTE Corp. and ZTE Deutschland GmbH (European Court of Justice, C-170/13, 2015), judgement on standard-essential patents
Anderson's-Black Rock, Inc. v. Pavement Salvage Co. Litigation involving Apple Inc. ... List of United States Supreme Court patent case law; LizardTech, Inc. v. Earth ...
An infringer can also be enjoined from further infringement of the patent, even to the point of being forced to remove an infringing product from the market. Until the 2006 Supreme Court case of eBay v. MercExchange, [10] plaintiffs routinely sought, and were granted, injunctions prohibiting infringement of their patents. After 2006 ...
Apple's attorneys told the court the "ultimate purpose" of its lawsuit was not money, but to win an injunction against sales of Masimo's smartwatches after an infringement ruling.
In the United-States, for example, a patent examiner will issue the following form paragraph if it is apparent that an applicant is not familiar with patent office policies and procedures: [32] ¶ 4.10 Employ Services of Attorney or Agent. An examination of this application reveals that applicant is unfamiliar with patent prosecution procedure.
"Roughly half of patents litigated to judgment are found invalid, even though the legal standard heavily favors issued patents. One study found that the most heavily litigated patents win in court ...