On Nov 20, 2018, Federal Circuit vacated preliminary
injunction granted by district court which was on erroneous interpretation of
claim scope.
Indivior markets Suboxone® Film for the treatment for
opioid dependency. Suboxone Film is covered by U.S. Patent Nos. 9,931,305 and
8,603,514 which are from same family. The ’305 patent is the only patent at
issue in this case. The Delaware Court previously determined that Dr Reddy’s
(DRL) ANDA process does not infringe the asserted ’514 patent claims because
the drying process was conventional. After the Delaware Court entered its
judgment of non-infringement, Indivior amended certain claims of a then pending
application that ultimately issued as the ’305 patent. Indivior amended the
claims to remove the words “dried” and “drying,” and to add “continuously” and
“continuously cast” in their place. DRL launched ANDA on the day of FDA
approval when the suit regarding ‘305 was pending.
District court after hearing granted preliminary injunction.
In granting the same, the district court concluded that Indivior was likely to
succeed on the merits of its infringement claim. It concluded that the claims,
which lack an express “drying” limitation, do not exclude any particular drying
method. The district court credited Indivior’s expert over DRL’s and declined
to import a drying step into the “continuously cast” limitation—the limitation
that Indivior added during prosecution to replace the terms “drying” and
“dried.” According to the district court, the ’305 claims do not include a drying
limitation. Based largely on this reasoning, it determined that Indivior’s suit
was not barred by claim preclusion in light of the Delaware Case. The district
court considered it likely that Indivior would be able to show that the ’305
claims are “patentably distinct” from the ’514 claims, and thus would likely
show that the suit was not barred by claim preclusion. DRL appealed the
district court’s grant of the preliminary injunction.
Federal circuit concluded that the district court abused its
discretion in granting the preliminary injunction. The ’305 patent
specification disclaims solely using conventional top air drying to produce
films with the claimed content uniformity. Because the ’305 claims thus do not
cover such films, Indivior has not shown that it is likely to succeed on the
merits of its infringement claim. Specifically, the patent specification states
that “conventional drying methods themselves are unable to provide uniform
films.” Conventional drying methods that dry only the top of the film produce a
“ripple effect” that results in “an uneven and therefore non-uniform film.” The
specification teaches that the rippling effect produced by conventional drying
methods can be “avoided by the present invention by “applying heat to the
bottom surface of the film with substantially no top air flow”. The ’305 patent
also discloses two examples that further disparage the use of conventional
drying. The patentee expressly disclaimed the sole use of conventional top air
drying to produce the claimed films. Such disavowal places films formed by
these methods outside the scope of the ’305 claims.
Indivior argued that removal of the drying terms during
prosecution removes any limitation on how the film is dried. According to
Indivior, the specification disclaimer found by the Delaware Court in its
analysis of the ’514 patent was “rooted in the meaning of the claim language
‘dried’ and ‘drying,’” and does not apply to the ’305 claims because those
terms are absent. Court however, disagreed & said that the drying
limitation has a textual basis in the term “continuously cast film,” which
appears in claims 1 and 26 of the ’305 patent. The “continuously cast film” in
claims 1 and 26 requires drying as the film starts out as a liquid and ends up as
a solid that can be cut into individual dosages. In the absence of this also
for that matter the specification makes clear that the invention does not
include films that were dried using conventional top air drying.
Federal circuit thus vacated & remanded district court’s
ruling as it abused its discretion in granting the preliminary injunction.
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