Difference between revisions of "United States v. N Adams (901422128)"
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Revision as of 18:12, 30 January 2011
Read for 1/31/11
Reading Notes
- Companion case with the Graham case (also decided 1966)
- US wants to review a a judgment of the Court of Claims holding a patent granted to Adams for a wet battery valid
- Adams sued the government for infringement
- USSC affirmed the finding of validity
- Patent is for a non-rechargeable electrical battery
- First "practical, water-activated, constant potential battery which could be fabricated and stored indefinitely without fluid in its cells"
- Brought his invention to the Army and Navy who decided it wasn't workable
- Eventually changed their mind and stated using such batteries but did not inform Adams
- Government relied heavily upon six instances of prior art
- Court basically discredits all of these as being very dissimilar to Adams'
- Government challenged under both 102 and 103
- Said his combination provided no significant change from prior designs even though it was an improvement
- Several errors in this
- Water-activated sets it apart and this was not an afterthought of a patent lawyer
- Several errors in this
- If his battery was merely full of identically functioning substitutions it would not have been an improvement
- Also conclude non-obviousness
- Long accepted notions about batteries would have deterred an inventor from the combinations used by Adams
- Noted experts expressed disbelief
Basic Patent Law
- The claims limit the invention and specifications cannot expand the monopoly
- An inoperable invention cannot negative novelty