• videocam On-Demand Webinar
  • signal_cellular_alt Intermediate
  • card_travel Patent
  • schedule 90 minutes

Doctrine of Equivalents in Patent Prosecution: DOE Application, Festo Exceptions, Recent Case Law Developments

About the Course

Introduction

This CLE course will guide patent counsel on the doctrine of equivalents (DOE). The panel will discuss Federal Circuit DOE decisions applying the Festo exceptions. The panel will also discuss the implications of the Supreme Court's decision to decline review of NexStep Inc. v. Comcast Cable Communications. Other recent Federal Circuit decisions on judicial exceptions to DOE will also be analyzed.

Description

The DOE is a judicial doctrine that permits a court to find infringement when an accused product or process falls outside the literal language of the claims but is equivalent to and differs only insubstantially from the claimed invention. The concept of something infringing when the accused product "performs substantially the same function in substantially the same way to obtain the same result" can be found as far back as Sanitary Refrigerator Co. v. Winters, 280 U.S. 30, 42 (1929).

Prosecution history can operate as a limit on DOE. "The doctrine of prosecution history estoppel limits the doctrine of equivalents when the applicant makes a narrowing amendment for purposes of patentability, or clearly and unmistakably surrenders subject matter by arguments made to the examiner." Salazar v. Procter & Gamble Co. (Fed. Cir. 2005). The rationale for this principle is that the patentee should not be allowed to gain through the DOE claim scope that it gave up during prosecution to obtain allowance of the claims. The panel will discuss the example of argument-based prosecution history estoppel found in Amgen Inc. v. Coherus Biosciences Inc. (Fed. Cir. 2019).

According to the U.S. Supreme Court in Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co. (2002) (Festo VIII), a patentee can rebut the presumption that prosecution history estoppel applies if it shows that the patentee comes within one of three exceptions. These exceptions are: the equivalent was unforeseeable at the time of the application, the rationale underlying the amendment bears no more than a tangential relation to the equivalent in question, or another reason suggesting that the patentee could not be expected to describe the insubstantial substitute.

Listen as our authoritative panel examines the lessons from Federal Circuit decisions for practitioners arguing for or against the Festo exceptions and, more broadly, for or against applying the DOE. The panel will also discuss hypothetical-claim analysis, first applied in the Federal Circuit Wilson icosahedron golf ball case, and ensnarement, disclosure-dedication, and the all-limitations rule.

Presented By

Attorneying Annie Dc, CPS, DR
Partner
Davis Brown Law Firm - Des Moines

Bio for Annie Attorney; loves horses and arguments

Big Boat
Firm Manager
The Mogy Law Firm - Memphis

This is a bio for Big Boat. Big Boat is an avid reader and unicyclist.

Roller S. Coaster MD, CPA, MST, DR
Fun Times
Lee's Test Firm

This is a bio for speaker, Roller Coaster. Roller Coaster enjoys walks on the beach and pizza with pineapple.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Monday, October 13, 2025

  • schedule

    1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT

I. Early DOE decisions; policy considerations

II. Estoppel

A.    Argument-based

B.    Amendment-based

III. Festo

A.    Exceptions

1.     The equivalent was unforeseeable at the time of the application

2.     Tangential relation

3.     An unreasonable expectation to describe the insubstantial substitute

IV. Hypothetical claims/ensnarement

V. Disclosure-dedication

VII. All-limitations rule


The panel will review these and other important issues:

  • The reappearance of the Festo exceptions
  • The return of ensnarement
  • Best practices for drafting and prosecuting claims to minimize estoppel-preventing DOE arguments