Ex Parte Aleles et al - Page 36



             Appeal No. 2006-2248                                                                               
             Application No. 10/158,618                                                                         

                   may hear expert testimony and consider other extrinsic evidence                              
                   relating to the relevant factual inquiries.                                                  
                   . . . As we have held in the Warner-Jenkinson context, that reason                           
                   should be discernible from the prosecution history record, if the public                     
                   notice function of a patent and its prosecution history is to have                           
                   significance.  See id. at 1356 (“Only the public record of the patent                        
                   prosecution, the prosecution history, can be a basis for [the reason for                     
                   the amendment to the claim].  Otherwise, the public notice function of                       
                   the patent record would be undermined.”); Festo [I], 234 F.3d at 586                         
                   (“In order to give due deference to public notice considerations under                       
                   the Warner-Jenkinson framework, a patent holder seeking to establish                         
                   the reason for an amendment must base his arguments solely upon the                          
                   public record of the patent’s prosecution, i.e., the patent’s prosecution                    
                   history.  To hold otherwise--that is, to allow a patent holder to rely on                    
                   evidence not in the public record to establish a reason for an                               
                   amendment--would undermine the public notice function of the patent                          
                   record.”).  Moreover, whether an amendment was merely tangential to                          
                   an alleged equivalent necessarily requires focus on the context in                           
                   which the amendment was made; hence the resort to the prosecution                            
                   history.  Thus, whether the patentee has established a merely                                
                   tangential reason for a narrowing amendment is for the court to                              
                   determine from the prosecution history record without the                                    
                   introduction of additional evidence, except, when necessary,                                 
                   testimony from those skilled in the art as to the interpretation of that                     
                   record.                                                                                      
                   . . . When at all possible, determination of the third rebuttal criterion                    
                   should also be limited to the prosecution history record. . . . We need                      
                   not decide now what evidence outside the prosecution history record,                         
                   if any, should be considered in determining if a patentee has met its                        
                   burden under this third rebuttal criterion.                                                  
                   We interpret Festo III to generally, perhaps effectively, limit the admissible               
             rebuttal evidence to the prosecution history record and extrinsic evidence related to              

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