Patentee’s Admissions Trump Secondary Indicia of Non-Obviousness
Client Alert | 1 min read | 07.10.07
In PharmaStem Therapeutics, Inc. v. Viacell, Inc., et al. (No. 05-1490; Fed. Cir. 2007), despite a strong dissent, a divided Federal Circuit panel finds the two patents at issue obvious, dismissing evidence of secondary considerations and rejecting the PTO’s conclusion of non-obviousness during a prior reexamination. The panel majority concludes instead that the claimed invention was nothing more than scientific confirmation of what was already believed to be true.
At issue was whether the inventors had a reasonable expectation that the elements of the invention could be combined from several prior art references to derive the claimed compositions and methods. While the patentee relied at trial on the testimony of an expert to show that a skilled artisan would not have had a reasonable expectation of success, the panel majority looks to the patent specification itself, noting that admissions in the specification regarding the prior art are binding on the patentee for purposes of a later inquiry into obviousness. Therefore, the panel majority concludes, a reasonable jury would have found the claimed invention obvious because the inventors merely used routine research methods to prove what was already known to be true. Moreover, the panel dismisses the patentee’s arguments concerning secondary indicia of non-obviousness and arguments concerning the deference that should be given the PTO’s conclusions of non-obviousness during reexamination over some of the references cited at trial, finding that these arguments were insufficient to overcome prima facie obviousness.
Judge Newman’s strong dissent argues that more weight should be given to the secondary considerations and deference shown to the PTO’s conclusions in the reexamination, stating “my colleagues simply reweigh selectively extracted evidence, ignore the actual peer response and acclaim at the time these inventions were made, and decide that this long-sought advance would have been obvious to this court.”
Insights
Client Alert | 6 min read | 07.09.26
EU Steel Overcapacity Regulation: New Permanent Measure in Force from 1 July 2026
The EU’s steel safeguard under Implementing Regulation (EU) 2019/159 expired on 30 June 2026 and has been replaced by a new permanent instrument — the EU Steel Overcapacity Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2026/1384) (the Regulation”). It imposes tariff-rate quotas and an out-of-quota duty, similarly to the steel safeguard measures that expired. The out-of-quota duty has been raised from 25% to 50% to minimize the risk of trade diversion. The Regulation reduces duty-free imports of 26 categories of steel products into the EU by an average of 47% compared with the quotas under the until recently applicable safeguard measures.
Client Alert | 1 min read | 07.08.26
CAS Board Publishes Final Rule Rescinding CAS 404, 408, 409, and 4117
Client Alert | 1 min read | 07.08.26
Crowell & Moring and Crowell GovCon Strategies at Farnborough International Airshow 2026
Client Alert | 7 min read | 07.08.26
Illinois Imposes Transparency and Safety Obligations on Frontier AI Systems
