Ex Parte Steenburg - Page 32



           Appeal 2006-1865                                                                         
           Application 09/660,433                                                                   
           Patent 5,802,641                                                                         

                 made during the application process and to the inferences that may                 
                 reasonably be drawn from the amendment (emphasis added).                           
                                               ***                                                  
                 A patentee’s decision to narrow his claims through amendment may                   
                 be presumed to be a general disclaimer of the territory between the                
                 original claim and the amended claim.  Exhibit Supply, 315 U.S., at                
                 136-137, 62 S. Ct. 513 (“By the amendment [the patentee] recognized                
                 and emphasized the difference between the two phrases and                          
                 proclaimed his abandonment of all that is embraced in that                         
                 difference”).  There are some cases, however, where the amendment                  
                 cannot reasonably be viewed as surrendering a particular equivalent.               
                 The equivalent may have been unforeseeable at the time of the                      
                 application; the rationale underlying the amendment may bear no                    
                 more than a tangential relation to the equivalent in question; or there            
                 may be some other reason suggesting that the patentee could not                    
                 reasonably be expected to have described the insubstantial substitute              
                 in question.  In those cases the patentee can overcome the                         
                 presumption that prosecution history estoppel bars a finding of                    
                 equivalence (emphasis added).                                                      
                                                ***                                                 
                 When the patentee has chosen to narrow a claim, courts may presume                 
                 the amended text was composed with awareness of this rule and that                 
                 the territory surrendered is not an equivalent of the territory claimed.           
                 In those instances, however, the patentee still might rebut the                    
                 presumption that estoppel bars a claim of equivalence.  The patentee               
                 must show that at the time of the amendment one skilled in the art                 
                 could not reasonably be expected to have drafted a claim that would                
                 have literally encompassed the alleged equivalent (emphasis added).                




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