• DocumentCode
    949408
  • Title

    The U.S. patent that reached around the world (patent infringement)

  • Author

    Klee, Maurice M.

  • Volume
    25
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2006
  • Firstpage
    76
  • Lastpage
    83
  • Abstract
    The article presents the case filed before the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) in the recent case of Union Carbide v. Shell regarding US patent infringement by activities in a foreign country. The case involved a patented method for making the industrial chemical ethylene oxide using silver-based catalysts. The seven-year patent infringement suit that ensued saw the victory of Union Carbide after two jury trials. However, the trial judge had said that Union Carbide was not entitled to any damages for Shell\´s sales of catalysts to its foreign customers. Union Carbide felt that such damages were proper because the only use for Shell\´s catalysts was to practice Union Carbide\´s patented method. Both at trial and on appeal, Union Carbide based its claim on a section of the Patent Laws [Section 271(f)], which Congress had enacted in 1984 in response to another court fight about offshore infringement. This section, in relevant part, i.e., 271(f)(2), provides that it is an act of infringement to supply "any component of a patented invention" from the United States with the intent that the component will be employed (combined) outside the United States in a manner that would infringe if done in the United States, if the component is 1) especially adapted for use in the invention and 2) not a staple article or commodity of commerce suitable for a substantial noninfringing use. Before the Union Carbide case, Section 271(f)(2) had been limited to apparatus and composition patents. Union Carbide wanted to extend its scope to method patents. The Union Carbide case is another example of the shrinking size of the world. Courts respond to changing realities, and with the global marketplace and outsourcing, one can expect that offshore infringement will become an increasingly common issue faced by patent owners and the infringers they sue.
  • Keywords
    catalysts; patents; Shell; U.S. patent; Union Carbide; apparatus patents; composition patents; foreign customers; industrial chemical ethylene oxide; offshore infringement; patent infringement; patented method; silver-based catalysts; Back; Chemical industry; Circuits; Hair; History; Lithium; Marketing and sales; Patent law; Resins; Silver; Algorithms; Artifacts; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Electrocardiography; Electrocoagulation; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Software;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0739-5175
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MEMB.2006.1636356
  • Filename
    1636356