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Claims barred by laches: Prosecution delay doesn’t pay, nor does skipping evidence of concrete injury

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed a district court’s judgment for the US Patent & Trademark Office (PTO) on application of prosecution laches in an action under 35 USC § 145. The Federal Circuit also agreed that the district court lacked Article III jurisdiction over certain claims because the plaintiff failed to provide evidence of concrete injury when challenged after initial pleadings. Hyatt v. Stewart, Case Nos. 2018-2390; -2391; -2392; 2019-1049; -1038; -1039; -1070; 2024-1992; -1993; -1994; -1995 (Fed. Cir. Aug. 29, 2025) (Reyna, Wallach, Hughes, JJ.) (precedential).

Gilbert Hyatt filed four GATT bubble patent applications, all of which had claims rejected by the examiner. Hyatt appealed those rejections to the Patent Trial & Appeal Board, which affirmed various rejections of others. Following the Board decisions, Hyatt filed four separate actions in district court under 35 U.S.C. § 145, challenging the PTO rejections. In response, the PTO asserted prosecution laches as an affirmative defense and, in the alternative, invalidity, based on anticipation and lack of written description.

The district court initially ruled in Hyatt’s favor, finding that the PTO’s affirmative defenses failed with respect to the claims for which the Board affirmed the examiner’s rejection. The district court concluded that it lacked Article III jurisdiction over the remaining claims (those for which the Board reversed the examiner) because there was no final agency action as to those claims.

The PTO appealed, arguing that prosecution laches barred all of the claims or, in the alternative, that the claims were invalid. Hyatt cross-appealed, contending that prosecution laches did not apply in § 145 actions or that the district court abused its discretion in applying laches in these specific § 145 actions.

In an earlier appeal, Hyatt I, the Federal Circuit vacated the district court’s rulings on prosecution laches, holding that the district court applied the wrong standard for prosecution laches and had the burden of proving that Hyatt engaged in unreasonable and unexplained delay in prosecuting his applications and that the delay was prejudicial. The panel remanded the case held the issue of Article III jurisdiction in abeyance. On remand, the district court reversed course and found in favor of the PTO on prosecution laches, concluding that Hyatt had unreasonably delayed prosecution in a manner that prejudiced the agency.

Hyatt appealed. The Federal Circuit consolidated the appeals with the earlier stayed jurisdictional issues. The Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s application of prosecution laches, finding no clear error in its determination that Hyatt’s conduct met the standard for delay and prejudice. The Federal Circuit also agreed that the district court lacked Article III jurisdiction over claims that had not been finally rejected by the PTO, reinforcing that § 145 actions may only proceed where there is a final agency determination resulting in a justiciable controversy.

On the issue of prosecution laches, the Federal Circuit explained that it had already considered and rejected Hyatt’s argument that prosecution laches is unavailable in a § 145 action in Hyatt I, and [...]

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Speculation of Harm Isn’t Standing: Not Every Adverse Board Decision Is Ticket to Appeal

After assessing whether a patent owner had standing to appeal the Patent Trial & Appeal Board’s final written decision, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit found no injury in fact to support Article III jurisdiction and dismissed the appeal. Dolby Labs. Licensing Corp. v. Unified Patents, LLC, Case No. 23-2110 (Fed. Cir. June 5, 2025) (Moore, Clevenger, Chen, JJ.)

Dolby owns a patent covering a prediction method involving an in-loop filter. Unified Patents, claiming to be the sole real party in interest (RPI), filed an inter partes review (IPR) challenging several patent claims as anticipated and obvious. Dolby contested the challenge, identifying nine additional entities it argued should have been named as RPIs (alleged RPIs). The Board declined to rule on Dolby’s inclusion, however, and proceeded with Unified as the sole RPI.

In its final written decision, the Board found that Unified failed to establish the unpatentability of any challenged claims. Consistent with the US Patent & Trademark Office’s practice, it also declined to address the RPI dispute, finding it immaterial – there was no evidence the alleged RPIs were estopped from filing their own IPRs later or that Unified had advantageously or strategically omitted them. Dolby appealed.

The Federal Circuit explained that when it reviews final Board decisions, its jurisdiction is constrained by Article III’s “Cases” and “Controversies” requirement. To establish standing, an appellant must demonstrate:

  • A concrete and particularized injury in fact that is actual or imminent, not speculative.
  • A causal link between the injury and the appellee’s challenged conduct.
  • A likelihood that the injury will be redressed by a favorable ruling.

Dolby asserted standing to appeal the Board’s refusal to address the RPI dispute based on three grounds:

Its statutory right to appeal as a “dissatisfied” party under 35 U.S.C. § 319.

  • The denial of its right to information under 35 U.S.C. § 312(a)(2).
  • An injury in fact arising from potential breaches of license agreements by the alleged RPIs and possible conflicts of interest involving the Board’s administrative patent judges.

The Federal Circuit rejected Dolby’s argument that it had a right to appeal based solely on dissatisfaction with the Board’s decision. The Court explained that the right to appeal a Board decision under the America Invents Act (AIA) requires Article III standing. The Court also dismissed Dolby’s argument for a statutory right to RPI information, finding that the AIA does not create an informational right. The Court explained that unlike statutes such as the Federal Advisory Committee Act or the Federal Election Campaign Act, which expressly grant public access to information, the AIA lacks a public access provision and explicitly limits judicial review of IPR-related determinations, including RPI disclosures.

As to Dolby’s right to appeal the Board decision, the Federal Circuit found Dolby’s argument too speculative to establish standing, citing four key deficiencies:

Dolby failed to assert that any alleged RPIs were party to license agreements, undermining its claim of potential breach.




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