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February 26, 2019 | New York Law Journal

Realty Law Digest

Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein, discusses "U.S. v. New York City Housing Authority," where a consent decree reforming NYCHA was rejected by the court and held to be not fair, reasonable or in the public interest; and “Hoffman v. Village of Larchmont,” where the Village was denied dismissal of its tortious interference with contract claim.
13 minute read
January 11, 2019 | Law.com

Patent Eligibility Remains Uncertain, Even After Recent Efforts to Bring Clarity

Congress is empowered to create a patent system to promote the useful arts, and it has enacted laws to create a patent system that encourages innovation. Balancing that power, however, the courts in recent years have tried to reign in the scope of the patent right by limiting the scope of patent-eligible subject matter. Part One of a two-part article.
12 minute read
November 07, 2018 | The Recorder

LA Judge Reinstates $131 Million Patent Award, Doubles It for Willfulness

Morgan Lewis guides nonprofit to enhanced damages in hearing implant dispute as U.S. District Judge Fernando Olguin cites Supreme Court's new rules and defendant Cochlear's conduct before and after trial.
4 minute read
November 07, 2018 | Litigation Daily

LA Judge Reinstates $131M Patent Award--Then Doubles It to $268M for Willfulness

Morgan Lewis guides nonprofit to enhanced damages in hearing implant dispute as U.S. District Judge Fernando Olguin cites Supreme Court's new rules and defendant Cochlear's conduct before and after trial.
4 minute read
November 06, 2018 | Law.com

Skilled in the Art: No Sovereign Shield to Section 101 + Meet the PTO's New Deputy Director

The PTO has a new deputy director, and it's former solicitor joined Perkins Coie.
9 minute read
July 25, 2018 | The Recorder

Chhabria Snuffs Nevro's Medical Device Suit, for Now

Some of the patents it's asserting against Boston Scientific are indefinite, while others aren't infringed by Boston's current spinal cord stimulation system.
1 minute read
July 10, 2018 | New York Law Journal

Indefiniteness of Claim Terms Reciting a Term of Degree After 'One-E-Way' and 'Sonix'

Some patents define the boundaries of their inventions using qualitative terms of degree, rather than quantitative measures. Patents must, however, reasonably inform skilled readers about what is within and what is outside the scope of their claims, and terms of degree can be subjective.
1 minute read
May 11, 2018 | The Recorder

Patent Owner Launches Takings Class Action in Wake of SCOTUS Ruling

Heninger Garrison Davis serves up a challenge to AIA proceedings that Justice Clarence Thomas refused to rule out.
3 minute read
May 11, 2018 | Law.com

Skilled in the Art: Spawn of Oil States | WesternGeco's Patent Hiccup | Monkey Selfie, The Movie?

An Alabama law firm is seeking damages for every patent owner who's had one or more claims invalidated during America Invents Act proceedings. Meanwhile, Merck & Co. won't fight a $14 million fee award, and who'll play the lawyers if there's a movie about the famous monkey selfie case?
6 minute read
April 11, 2018 | National Law Journal

PTO Director: 'Something Must Be Done' to Clarify Section 101

In a speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Andrei Iancu also promised wide-ranging review of Patent Trial and Appeal Board operations and standards.
4 minute read

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