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Invention, Refinement and Patent Claim Scope: A New Perspective
on the Doctrine of Equivalents
Michael J. Meurer
Craig Allen Nard
Boston University School of Law Working Paper 04-03
Abstract
The doctrine of equivalents (DOE) allows courts to expand the scope of
patent rights granted by the Patent Office. The doctrine has been justified
on fairness grounds, but it lacks a convincing economic justification.
The standard economic justification holds that certain frictions block
patent applicants from literally claiming appropriately broad rights,
and thus, the DOE is available at trial to expand patent scope and overcome
these frictions. The friction theory suffers from three main weaknesses.
First, the theory is implausible on empirical grounds. Frictions such
as limits of language, mistake, and unforeseeability are missing from
the leading cases. Second, there is not a convincing answer to the question
of why the doctrine of equivalents, rather than some other doctrinal approach,
should be used to overcome the frictions. The frictions can be overcome,
or at least mitigated, for example, by astutely amending claims during
prosecution; through a reissue proceeding after the patent issues; or
through artful claim drafting as an initial matter. Third, proponents
of a far-reaching DOE fail to pay adequate attention to the notice function
of patent claims and are insufficiently sensitive to patent law’s
delicate incentive dynamic.
We develop a better explanation of why claim breadth falls short of the
maximum breadth allowed by patent law. Our explanation replaces the passive
patent attorney depicted in the friction theory with an active inventor
and attorney who are capable of responding effectively to the frictions
mentioned above. Whether an inventor obtains the broadest permissible
claim breadth depends mostly on the talent and effort of the inventor
and attorney in identifying what has been enabled. A good attorney predicts
the embodiments that could be chosen by infringers and finds appropriate
language to draft a suitably broad claim. We call this process claim refinement,
and we develop a refinement theory of the doctrine of equivalents.
We justify the doctrine of equivalents primarily as a tool for promoting
efficient investment in claim refinement. Although critics of the DOE
contend the doctrine unduly inhibits competition, we show the degree of
competition is often unaffected by the presence or absence of the DOE.
The inventor can block competition in the absence of the DOE by drafting
broad patent claims. The DOE should be used to avoid socially wasteful
preemptive refinement. We reject the popular notion that the DOE is especially
appropriate in the case of unforeseeable, later-developed technology.
We reach this conclusion because in certain cases patent applicants can
capture unforeseen embodiments at relatively low cost through clever claim
drafting strategies. And in other cases unforeseen equivalents are unattainable
no matter the amount of time and money spent on refinement efforts. In
the latter cases, patent applicants would not exert much effort refining
their claims to cover these equivalents, and inventor’s incentives
would not be much affected by a minute probability of loss of effective
patent protection.
Keywords: patent scope, invention, doctrine of equivalents, patent claims
JEL Classifications: K2, L5, O34
Size: 633 KB
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Michael J. Meurer Contact Information
meurer@bu.edu
Boston University School of Law
765 Commonwealth Ave
Boston, MA 02215
USA
(617) 353-6292
Craig Allen Nard Contact Information
craig.nard@case.edu
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
11075 East Blvd.
Cleveland, OH 44106-7148
Presentation and Publication Information:
The Social Science Research Network Electronic Paper Collection:
http://ssrn.com/abstract=533083
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