skills/casemark/skills/answer-with-invalidity-contentions

answer-with-invalidity-contentions

SKILL.md

Answer with Invalidity Contentions

Combined answer and Patent Local Rule 3-3 invalidity contentions for a patent defendant — responds to each complaint allegation while building the invalidity record for trial.

Prerequisites

  1. Complaint — all numbered paragraphs requiring response
  2. Asserted patent(s) — specification, claims, and prosecution history
  3. Prior art — patents, publications, products, or public uses with qualifying dates
  4. Jurisdiction — district court and applicable local patent rules (PLR 3-3 or equivalent)
  5. Effective filing date — pre-AIA (before March 16, 2013) vs. AIA § 102 framework
  6. Accused product/method — for non-infringement admissions and denials

Output Structure

1. Caption and Introduction

  • Full party names, civil action number, division
  • Title: DEFENDANT'S ANSWER AND INVALIDITY CONTENTIONS
  • Jury demand if not previously filed (FRCP 38)
  • Opening denial of infringement of any valid, enforceable claim

2. Admissions and Denials (FRCP 8(b))

Respond paragraph-by-paragraph mirroring complaint numbering.

Response When Language
Admit Verifiable facts (jurisdiction, patent issuance) "Defendant admits U.S. Patent No. X was issued on [date]."
Admit in part / Deny in part Mixed fact and legal conclusion "Admits it manufactures [product]; denies infringement of any valid claim."
Lack of knowledge (8(b)(5)) Within plaintiff's peculiar knowledge "Lacks sufficient knowledge; treated as denial."
Deny False facts and all legal conclusions "Defendant denies."
  • Address each sub-part of compound paragraphs individually
  • Close: "All allegations not expressly admitted are denied." (FRCP 8(b)(6))

3. Affirmative Defenses

Number separately. Apply Twombly/Iqbal plausibility with brief factual predicates.

# Defense Notes
1 Non-infringement Literal and DOE
2 Invalidity — §§ 101, 102, 103, 112 Claim charts in § 5; pled in alternative
3 Inequitable conduct FRCP 9(b) particularity; reserved pending discovery
4 Prosecution laches / Equitable estoppel If prosecution history supports
5 License / Exhaustion If authorized sale or course of dealing
6 Failure to state a claim Missing claim specificity
7 Statute of limitations 35 U.S.C. § 286 (6-year bar)
8 Unclean hands / Waiver As facts support

Defenses not raised may be waived under FRCP 8(c) — err toward inclusion.

4. Counterclaims (if applicable)

  • DJ of non-infringement (28 U.S.C. § 2201)
  • DJ of invalidity
  • State jurisdictional basis separately

5. Invalidity Contentions

Each contention requires: (a) reference identification, (b) prior art qualification, (c) claim chart.

Reference header: Title, authors/inventors, publication date, publisher/assignee, patent or publication number, prior art basis (AIA § 102(a)(1)/(a)(2) or pre-AIA § 102(a)/(b)/(e)/(g)).

§ 102 — Anticipation

One chart per reference per claim. Map every limitation.

Claim Limitation Prior Art Disclosure (col:line or pg:¶) Analysis
[Preamble] [Ref. p. X, ¶ Y] [Disclosure explanation]
[Element 1a] [Ref. col. 3:12–25] [Mapping]
  • Patents: presumed enabling
  • NPL: address In re Wands enablement factors
  • Show anticipation under any reasonable claim construction

§ 103 — Obviousness

Apply Graham v. John Deere (scope of art, differences, POSITA level, objective indicia). Motivation to combine per KSR v. Teleflex: explicit suggestion, problem-solution, obvious to try, known elements in established functions.

Claim Limitation Primary Ref. Secondary Ref. Combination Rationale
[Element 1a] Ref. A, col. 2:10 Taught by A alone
[Element 1b] Ref. B, p. 5 POSITA would combine: [motivation]

Rebut secondary considerations: commercial success (non-claimed features), long-felt need (art already suggested), failure of others (lack of motivation), unexpected results (predictable to POSITA).

§ 112 Contentions

Ground Standard Identify
§ 112(a) Written description Inventor possessed full claim scope at filing Broad terms unsupported by spec
§ 112(a) Enablement No undue experimentation (Wands factors) Claim breadth vs. spec disclosure
§ 112(b) Indefiniteness Reasonably certain to POSITA (Nautilus v. Biosig) Subjective/relative terms, unbounded functional language
§ 112(f) Means-plus-function Spec must disclose corresponding structure Nonce words without disclosed structure

§ 101 — Subject Matter Eligibility (if applicable)

Alice/Mayo two-step: (1) directed to abstract idea, law of nature, or natural phenomenon? (2) inventive concept beyond routine/conventional activity?

6. Prayer for Relief

  • No infringement of any valid, enforceable claim
  • All asserted claims invalid under §§ 101, 102, 103, 112
  • Patent unenforceable (if inequitable conduct pled)
  • Dismissal with prejudice; costs and fees under § 285
  • Declaratory relief; such other relief as the Court deems proper

7. Signature Block (FRCP 11)

  • Attorney name, bar number, firm, address, contact
  • Check local rules for corporate verification requirements

Guidelines

  • Completeness — Federal Circuit may preclude invalidity theories omitted from initial contentions; PLR 3-3 omissions can be fatal at trial
  • Concurrent production — prior art references must be produced to plaintiff with service of contentions (unless publicly available)
  • Page limits — most districts cap at 35–50 pages; check local rules
  • Pre-AIA vs. AIA — confirm effective filing date; pre-AIA § 102 subsections differ materially from AIA § 102(a)(1)/(a)(2)
  • Internal consistency — admitted facts in § 2 must not contradict predicates in § 3 or § 5
  • Verify citations — confirm statute versions, case holdings, and local PLR numbering for the specific district [VERIFY]
  • Scope — U.S. federal courts only; ITC proceedings use different procedural rules
Weekly Installs
2
Repository
casemark/skills
GitHub Stars
5
First Seen
11 days ago
Installed on
amp2
cline2
opencode2
cursor2
kimi-cli2
codex2