Yesterday, June 28, 2010, the Supreme Court handed down a much-awaited opinion regarding patent law. In Bilski v. Kappos, the Supreme Court addressed the issues of 1) whether the “machine-or-transformation test is the sole test for patentability under 35 USC 101 (patents having to do with new and useful “processes”); and 2) whether business method patents, as a subset of “process” patents, should be categorically unpatentable.
By way of background, business method, software, and other “process” patents are hotly contested and debated. In an increasingly online and technologically-shaped environment, many new ideas and inventions are either embodied in software or methodological algorithms or at least integrally tied to such algorithms. The difficulty for patentability purposes is that patent law does not allow for patent protection over laws of nature, abstract ideas, or pure mathematical formulas. To do so would unfairly grant a monopoly to a certain patent-holder and chill creativity and innovation. On the flip side, patent law is designed to reward innovation and creativity with granting exclusive rights to use an invention. If the inventor has designed a new software that is innovative and of value, that inventor will want a patent for her hard work. In fact, the promise of a patent might have been an impetus to create the software in the first place. We see an obvious conflict of policies in this area of law.
Throughout the years, the courts have promulgated different tests for helping to determine whether such “processes” are patentable. For instance, the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in 1998 held that a process is patentable if it produces a “useful, concrete, and tangible result.” State Street v. Signature Financial, 149 F.3d 1368. Since that time, courts have also used the “machine-or-transformation” test, which states that a process can be patented if “(1) it is tied to a particular machine or apparatus, or (2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or thing.” See Bilski. How these tests get applied as to different inventions can be very complicated, but the important point is that there has been a need for guidance from the Supremes as to how lower courts and the USPTO should examine these inventions for patentability.
Turning to the Supreme Court’s opinion in Bilski, the court held that the “machine-or-transformation” test is NOT the exclusive test for patentability of processes, and held that there is NO categorical exclusion for business method patents. The claimed invention in this case was a method of hedging risks in financial markets. The Supreme Court, explicitly eschewing the adoption of any categorical rules, decided the case narrowly, on the basis that the claimed invention here was simply an abstract idea that could not be patented.
The important take-away point here is that the Supreme Court’s opinion did not affect a sea-change in patent law that potentially could have called into doubt existing patents. Had the Supreme Court stated that there was one exclusive test or that business methods were not patentable, we would have a litigation nightmare on our hands. It, rather, signaled that examiners should continue to use the machine-or-transformation test, but as a “clue” for patentability, and not as the exclusive test.
In a section of the opinion that is not legally binding as precedent (because it did not receive a majority), Justice Kennedy stated that as technology develops, so too might the test for patentability. He suggested that “new technologies may call for new inquiries.” This “dictum” is not binding, but it is a welcome sign to inventors that patent law, if properly guided, has the ability to adapt to ever-changing technologies.
If you have any questions or want to learn more, please do not hestitate to contact our law office at info@chicolawfirm.com!
