Induced Infringement Requires Inducer to Successfully Communicate With and Induce Third-Party Direct Infringer


POWER INTEGRATIONS v. FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR: Dec. 12, 2016. Before Prose, Schall, Chen.                                                             

The Takeaway

A party cannot be liable for induced infringement where it does not successfully communicate with and induce a third-party direct infringer.

Where a finding of infringement by equivalence would entirely vitiate a particular claimed element, such a finding is inappropriate.

Procedural Posture

On appeal from D. Del. where a jury found that (1) plaintiff Power’s ’270 and ’605 patents were neither anticipated nor obvious and were not infringed; (2) Power’s ’851 and ’876 patents were not anticipated and were directly and indirectly infringed by Fairchild; (3) Fairchild’s ’972 patent was not obvious and was infringed by Power under the doctrine of equivalents; and (4) Fairchild’s ’595 patent was not anticipated and was not infringed by Power. The district court then granted Power’s JMOL that Fairchild directly infringed the ’605 patent, but denied the parties other motions. The district court then granted Power’s motion for a permanent injunction and denied Fairchild’s motion for a permanent injunction. Both parties appealed. The CAFC affirmed-in-part, reversed-in-part, vacated-in-part, and remanded.

Analysis


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National Law Review, Volume VII, Number 23