Categorized | Courts, caselaw

After Bilski – what about mental process claims that include a known, non-mental step?

One paragraph opinions from the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit are, generally speaking, not all that interesting. The court’s opinion in Classen Immunotherapies v. Biogen IDEC, decided the week before Christmas, breaks this general rule, though.  The one paragraph opinion is interesting not only because it’s the first post-Bilski opinion dealing with the patentability of process claims under 35 U.S.C. 101, but also because it is completely silent on an interesting post-Bilski issue that was discussed extensively during oral agument.

Understanding the timing of these two cases is important. On October 30, 2008, the court announced its much-anticipated decision in In re Bilski in which the court adopted the machine-or-transformation test for patentability of processes under 35 U.S.C. 101. The court heard oral arguments for Classen after oral argument for Bilski but before publication of the Bilski opinion. This timing means that members of the Classen panel were likely debating the Bilski issue and/or reviewing the Bilski opinion at the time of the Classen oral argument (The court sat en banc for Bilski).

Indeed, listening to the Classen oral argument clearly shows that Judge Moore was intensely interested in the patentability of mental processes at the time. She initiated a discussion on the issue by asking counsel for the patentee to ignore the non-mental immunizing step of the claim at issue (“yes, clearly you’re absolutely right…these are not exclusively mental process claims.”). Counsel entered into an academic discussion with Judge Moore only reluctantly and eventually offered an interesting perspective on why such claims should be patentable (just because you can’t enforce a patent doesn’t mean you should be prevented from getting the patent).

Then, after this fascinating discussion, the court issued its one paragraph opinion that summarily dismisses the claims as unpatentable. To support this holding, the court pointed only to Bilski. This would be unremarkable, of course, if the claims at issue in Classen were pure mental process claims. But, as is clear from the oral argument, the claims included a non-mental step (immunizing). Indeed, as mentioned above, Judge Moore had to hypothetically remove this step from the claim in order to entice counsel into the patentability discussion in the first place.

So what became of the non-mental immunizing step? We really have no idea. But, considering the lack of discussion in the Classen opinion and its non-precedential status, we know that an open question exists as to whether a non-mental step (particularly, a known non-mental step) in a process claim that can otherwise be performed mentally is sufficient to confer patentability.

How’s that for an interesting one paragraph opinion?

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Comments

  • Appellant's Counsel
    # posted on 01.12.09 at 11:00 am

    Very good discussion. You are completely correct. One Point, we argued in August 2007, two months before the first Bilski oral argument and eight months before the Bilski en banc argument. The decision sat at the panel from August 2007 till December 2008.

  • Appellant's Counsel
    # posted on 01.14.09 at 10:22 am

    We are counsel to Classen Immunotherapies in the recent 12-19-08 CAFC decision Classen v. Biogen addressing section 101 post Bilski.

    We filed a Petition for Rehearing on January 13th (attached) and are seeking amicus briefing.

    We are only seeking to reverse that part of the opinion that states that immunization is not a transformation.

    We would appreciate if you would consider filing an amicus brief in support of our request for rehearing and would also appreciate if you could help pass on this call for amicus briefs. contact me at joe@zitotlp.com

  • J. Matthew Buchanan
    # posted on 01.15.09 at 11:32 am

    A .pdf of Appellant’s petition for rehearing (a combined request for panel rehearing and for rehearing en banc) is available here.

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