November 10, 2009

Justices Hear Patent Case on Protecting the Abstract
By JOHN SCHWARTZ
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/10/business/10patent.html?ref=business&pagewanted=print


WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justices took up a case on Monday that could 
reshape the realm of what can be patented, and expressed skepticism 
about giving protection to abstract business innovations.

During arguments, several justices, including the court’s newest member, 
Sonia M. Sotomayor, seemed to disagree with arguments advocating a 
patent for a method of hedging.

The case, Bilski and Warsaw v. Kappos, concerned a business method 
patent that had been denied to Bernard Bilski and Rand Warsaw, who in 
1997 applied for a process that could help institutions like utilities, 
or even factories and schools, have more predictable energy costs.

The justices peppered J. Michael Jakes, a lawyer for Mr. Bilski and Mr. 
Warsaw, with hypothetical patents that they clearly found ludicrous.

Justice Antonin Scalia suggested that under Mr. Jakes’s argument, a 
patent for “somebody who writes a book on how to win friends and 
influence people” might be allowed, while Justice Sotomayor suggested a 
“method of speed dating.”

Justice Stephen G. Breyer set off a ripple of laughter when he brought 
up his “great, wonderful, really original method of teaching antitrust 
law” — one in which 80 percent of students actually stayed awake — and 
asked if that could be patented.

Mr. Jakes argued that some of the examples were potentially patentable, 
though other considerations would be brought to bear by examiners, 
including the question of whether the method was obvious.

The patent process is a balancing act with origins in the United States 
Constitution, which called for legal protection for authors and 
inventors “to promote the progress of science and useful arts” for a 
limited time.

Initially, patents chiefly concerned tangible things like new machines 
and novel chemical compounds. Over time, the rules about what could be 
patented have come to include increasingly abstract business methods — 
roughly, ways of doing things.

The high-water mark for such patents was a 1998 ruling by the United 
States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, State Street Bank v. 
Signature Financial Group, which has led to the issuance of thousands of 
business method patents. In that case, the court ruled that a method of 
processing mutual fund data could be patented.

In the Bilski case, the Patent and Trademark Office, pulling back from 
the realms of abstraction, denied the patent. The United States Court of 
Appeals for the Federal Circuit upheld the patent office’s decision, 
writing that such patents should be “tied to a particular machine or 
apparatus” or transform something “into a different state or thing.”

The case has drawn intense interest, and nearly 70 amicus briefs by 
interested parties, including Microsoft, Google, Bank of America and the 
American Civil Liberties Union.

“I think this case is the case of the century for patent law,” said John 
F. Duffy, a professor at the George Washington University Law School. 
Mr. Duffy, who was co-author of a brief on behalf of several technology 
companies, favors a broad reading of patent law for financial 
engineering tools and other emerging technologies.

“There’s a tremendous public benefit that could come from encouraging 
innovation in this space,” he said. Similar views have been advocated in 
briefs from the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries, as well as 
technology companies like Yahoo.

Pamela Samuelson, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, 
School of Law, said, “It’s not very often that some obscure issue of 
patent law can excite so much attention.”

Professor Samuelson, who was an author of a brief on behalf of the 
Electronic Frontier Foundation, an online civil liberties group, and 
others, said it was time for the court to tap the brakes on the business 
patents rush. The earlier State Street decision, her brief stated, had 
the effect of “knocking patent law loose from its historical moorings 
and improperly injecting patents into business areas where they were 
neither needed nor wanted.”

Briefs from technology companies like Microsoft and Google also 
recommended greater restrictions on business method patents.

During the one-hour oral argument on Monday afternoon, the Bilski patent 
and its ilk also seemed to sit poorly with Justice Anthony M. Kennedy 
and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who raised questions that 
suggested an interest in narrowing the scope of patents to more squarely 
focus on physical inventions and not abstract ideas and processes.

Justice Kennedy described the beginnings of the insurance industry in 
the late 17th century, thanks to the development of calculus and the 
ability to create actuarial tables. “It’s difficult for me to think 
Congress would have wanted to give only one person the capacity to issue 
insurance,” he said.

Chief Justice Roberts wrangled with the lawyer for the government, 
Deputy Solicitor General Malcolm L. Stewart, over the final footnote in 
the government’s brief, which conceded that a business method might be 
fit for patenting if it was tied to a computer. Chief Justice Roberts 
said that that footnote “takes away everything you spent 53 pages 
establishing.”

Mr. Stewart noted that the government had actually argued against having 
the court take up the case, since there were “difficult problems out 
there” in areas like software innovation and medical diagnostics that 
have yet to be satisfactorily worked through.

Justice Kennedy broke in and joked that the government “thought we would 
mess it up,” eliciting laughter from the gallery. Mr. Stewart said 
instead that the patent at issue in this case was simply “an unsuitable 
vehicle for resolving the hard questions,” and that those were likely to 
remain unresolved at the end of the day.

“But this case could be decided without making any bold steps” that 
would complicate future decisions, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg interjected.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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