High Court to Hear Case On Patent Limits
Types of Business Methods Under Review
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Tuesday, June 2, 2009
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed yesterday to consider what types of business methods qualify for patent protection in a case with ramifications for the software, biotechnology and financial services industries.
The justices said they will review a lower court decision that narrowed the class of patentable inventions, excluding some innovations that don't have a physical component. Because it came from the federal appeals court that handles all patent appeals, the ruling had marked a watershed in U.S. intellectual property law.
The issue is dividing companies. Microsoft, IBM and a financial-services industry trade group supported limits on business-method patents at the appeals court, while others, including consulting company Accenture and appliance maker Royal Philips Electronics, say the court's requirements on inventors are too strict.
"The decision is overreaching, works an unnecessary sea change in deep-rooted principles of patent law and will necessitate a massive revaluation of America's intangible technology assets," Amsterdam-based Philips argued in papers urging the Supreme Court to step in.
The case will mark the first time since 1981 that the Supreme Court has ruled on the types of innovations covered by the U.S. Patent Act. The justices will hear arguments and rule during the nine-month term that starts in October.
In the dispute before the court, inventors Bernard L. Bilski and Rand A. Warsaw are seeking a patent on a way to buy or sell energy at a fixed price based on the expected weather for a season.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled against Bilski and Warsaw in October. The court said in a 9-3 decision that business-method patents must either be connected to a machine or "transform" an item from one state to another.
The appeals court overturned its own 1998 decision that said business methods are entitled to patent protection if they had a "useful, concrete and tangible result." The 1998 ruling, which involved a computerized accounting method for managing a mutual fund, opened the door to a flood of such patents.
The potential impact of the October decision is a subject of dispute. The Obama administration, urging the Supreme Court not to get involved, characterized the Federal Circuit ruling as a narrow one that would have limited impact on the patentability of software and biotechnological and chemical inventions.
The Federal Circuit "did not hold that business methods are categorically ineligible for patent protection," argued Solicitor General Elena Kagan, the administration's top courtroom lawyer. "Indeed, the majority expressly rejected calls to endorse that view."
Kagan's brief backed the position of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which over the past few years has sought to give greater scrutiny to applications.
The patent office grants patents to processes, machines, manufactured items and compositions of matter including drug compounds. Courts have wrangled for decades over how to define processes.
Bilski and Warsaw contended in their appeal that the Federal Circuit "has essentially confined all process patents to manufacturing methods, using a test that may have been appropriate during the Industrial Age but no longer fits our modern information-based economy."


