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No Article III Appellate Standing Under the Sun

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit dismissed Incyte’s appeal of a Patent Trial & Appeal Board decision, holding that a disappointed validity challenger lacked appellate standing to challenge the Board’s final written decision. Incyte Corp. v. Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries, Inc., Case No. 23-1300 (Fed. Cir. May 7, 2025) (Moore, C.J.; Hughes, Cunningham, JJ.) (Hughes, J., concurring).

After the Board upheld the validity of challenged claims of a patent owned by Sun Pharmaceuticals in a post-grant review proceeding (PGR), Incyte appealed and sought a determination that the claims were unpatentable. Sun Pharmaceuticals challenged whether Incyte had Article III standing to support an appeal to the Federal Circuit based on a lack of injury-in-fact.

The Federal Circuit focused on its jurisdiction to hear the appeal as a threshold issue and whether Incyte, as the party seeking review, met its burden of establishing Article III standing at the time it filed its appeal.

As context, the Federal Circuit noted that standing requires a concrete, actual, or imminent injury that is traceable to the challenged conduct and likely to be redressed by the court’s decision. Incyte asserted it had standing to appeal based on potential infringement liability and under the competitor standing doctrine.

Addressing potential infringement liability, the Federal Circuit noted Incyte’s reliance on a supplemental declaration from an in-house business development leader submitted during briefing. Noting that Incyte’s Article III standing was “not self-evident,” the Court ruled that Incyte should have presented evidence prior to its reply brief and declined to consider the supplemental evidence. Incyte was on notice that its appellate standing was challenged, and that evidence of its standing should have been submitted at the earliest possible opportunity. Finding no good cause for the delay, the Court declined to exercise its discretion to consider Incyte’s supplemental evidence and, based only on earlier submitted evidence, found that Incyte failed to establish that it had “concrete plans for future activity” that would create a “substantial risk of future infringement.”

In its discussion of the competitor standing doctrine, which allows competitors to challenge patents that could harm their competitive position, the Federal Circuit found the doctrine inapplicable because Incyte failed to show it would suffer economic harm from the Board’s ruling on patent validity. Rather, the Board’s ruling upholding specific patent claims “does not, by the operation of ordinary economic forces, naturally harm a [challenger] just because it is a competitor in the same market as the beneficiary of the government action (the patentee).” As the Court explained, “it is not enough to show a benefit to a competitor to establish injury in fact; the party seeking to establish standing must show a concrete injury to itself.”

The Federal Circuit held that because Incyte had not shown it was currently engaged in or had non-speculative plans to engage in conduct covered by the challenged patent, it was unable to establish injury-in-fact.

In his concurrence, Judge Hughes stated that while Incyte lacked Article III standing, he believed that Federal Circuit precedent was [...]

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Blurred Vision: Appeal Dismissed for Lack of Standing

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit dismissed a patent challenger’s appeal in an inter partes review (IPR) because the challenger could not meet the injury-in-fact requirement for Article III standing. Platinum Optics Tech. Inc. v. Viavi Solutions Inc., Case No. 23-1227 (Fed. Cir. Aug. 16, 2024) (Moore, Taranto, JJ.; Checchi, Dist. J, sitting by designation).

Viavi Solutions owns a patent directed to optical filters that include layers of hydrogenated silicon and to sensor systems comprising such optical filters. Platinum Optics Technology (PTOT) petitioned for IPR. The Patent Trial & Appeal Board found that PTOT had failed to establish that the challenged claims were unpatentable. PTOT appealed.

The Federal Circuit dismissed the appeal, finding that PTOT did not have Article III standing. The Court explained that while Article III standing is not required to appear before an administrative agency (such as the US Patent & Trademark Office), such standing is required once a party seeks judicial review in an Article III federal court. PTOT argued it had standing because of potential infringement liability due to its continued distribution of a product previously accused of infringing the patent and its development of new models of the previously accused product. The Court rejected both arguments.

First, PTOT asserted that it suffered an injury in fact because there was a likelihood that Viavi would sue again. PTOT relied on a letter from Viavi stating that it did not believe PTOT could fulfill its supply agreements with noninfringing products. The Federal Circuit disagreed with PTOT’s assertion, concluding that mere speculation about the possibility of suit, without more, is insufficient to confer Article III standing. Moreover, the Court noted that Viavi’s letter was sent prior to the patent infringement suits, which were dismissed with prejudice. Thus, the Court found that PTOT had not established an injury in fact based on potential infringement liability due to its continued distribution of a previously accused product.

Second, PTOT asserted that it suffered an injury in fact based on its development of new models of the previously accused product. PTOT’s argument was supported by a declaration from a Deputy Director of Operation Management at PTOT and the same letter from Viavi threatening future suit. The Federal Circuit did not find the declaration testimony compelling. It explained that the declaration, which generally alleged that PTOT continued to develop new models of the previously accused product, did not identify any specific concrete plans for PTOT to develop a product that might implicate the patent. The declaration did not explain the particulars of these new models or how the models might relate to the patent. The Court found that the declaration was insufficient to establish that PTOT’s development activities created a substantial risk of infringement or were likely to cause Viavi to assert infringement. The Court noted that the letter from Viavi did not specifically address models in development or foreclose PTOT’s ability to develop a noninfringing product.

Thus, the Federal Circuit concluded that PTOT failed to establish an injury [...]

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