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Legal Analysis – Intellectual Property

Understanding U.S. Patent Law: A Clear Guide to Rights, Disputes, and Remedies

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Posted: 17th November 2025
George Daniel
Last updated 18th November 2025
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Patent law shapes innovation across industries, yet many people misunderstand the basics. Discussions about lawsuits, verdicts, and “patent wars” often overlook the legal processes that determine who owns what and how rights are enforced. This guide explains those mechanisms in clear, accessible terms fit for long-term reference.


What a Patent Actually Protects

A patent does not protect a broad idea.
It protects a specific invention, defined through claims—the numbered statements outlining exactly what the inventor has the right to exclude others from making, using, selling, or importing.

Patents can cover:

  • devices and components

  • chemical formulas

  • software-implemented processes

  • medical and diagnostic technologies

  • manufacturing methods

  • improvements on existing inventions

Owning a patent provides the right to exclude, not an automatic right to commercialise the invention.


How an Invention Becomes a Patent

Before granting a patent, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office evaluates whether the invention is:

  • new,

  • non-obvious,

  • useful, and

  • adequately described.

This examination often includes back-and-forth correspondence, amendments, and technical clarification.
Most U.S. utility patents last 20 years from the filing date, subject to required maintenance fees.


Why Claim Construction Shapes Every Dispute

In nearly all patent litigation, the definition of specific claim terms becomes the turning point.

During a Markman hearing, the judge interprets disputed terms by reviewing:

  • the patent text,

  • the record of its prosecution, and

  • how a skilled person in the field would understand the language.

This interpretation sets the scope of the patent and guides the infringement and validity analysis that follows.


What Counts as Patent Infringement

Two main theories of infringement exist:

1. Literal infringement

The accused product or method contains every element of the claim as written.

2. Doctrine of equivalents

The product or method may not match word-for-word but operates in a substantially similar way to achieve a substantially similar result.

Defendants often challenge infringement by arguing the claims do not cover the accused technology or that the patent itself is invalid.


Patent Damages: Lost Profits vs. Reasonable Royalty

If a court finds infringement and the patent is valid, damages must be compensatory. Patent law recognises two primary measures:

1. Lost profits

Available when the patent holder can show it lost sales directly because of the infringement.

2. Reasonable royalty

The most common measure, especially in technology cases.
Courts use a hypothetical negotiation framework, guided by the well-established Georgia-Pacific factors, to estimate a fair licensing rate.

Enhanced damages may be available for willful infringement, but only within the statutory framework and subject to judicial discretion.


Injunctions and the Four-Factor Test

Alongside monetary damages, courts may grant an injunction preventing further use or sale of infringing products.
Under the Supreme Court’s eBay v. MercExchange decision, injunctions require proof of:

  1. irreparable harm,

  2. an inadequate legal remedy,

  3. a balance of hardships favoring the patent owner, and

  4. consistency with the public interest.

This test applies uniformly and is not automatic, even when infringement is established.


The Role of the ITC: Import Bans and Redesign Reviews

Patent owners can pursue enforcement through the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), which has authority to block the import of infringing products.

The ITC can:

  • investigate infringement,

  • issue exclusion orders, and

  • refer redesigned products to U.S. Customs and Border Protection for clearance.

The ITC cannot award damages; its power lies in controlling imports.
This path is significant for industries where manufacturing occurs outside the United States.


How Patent Appeals Work

All patent appeals go to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which reviews legal and procedural issues such as:

  • claim interpretation,

  • evidentiary rulings, and

  • whether the correct legal standards were applied.

The Federal Circuit does not retry the case but evaluates the legal foundation of the trial outcome.


Common Misconceptions About Patent Law

“Older technology isn’t protected.”

Protection does not depend on novelty of the field; it depends on whether the patent was valid and in force during the relevant period.

“Expired patents can’t support damages.”

They can support damages for infringement that occurred before expiration.

“Patents protect ideas.”

They protect claims, not general concepts.

“A verdict means immediate payment.”

Damages can be paused during post-trial motions or appeals.

“A redesign always avoids infringement.”

Redesigns must still be evaluated against the patent claims and, in ITC cases, reviewed by U.S. Customs.


Why Patent Law Remains Central to Innovation

Patents encourage investment in research and development while setting clear boundaries for competition. Understanding how patent rights are created, interpreted, and enforced provides crucial context for the disputes that shape technology and industry.


U.S. Patent Law Explained: Key Rights, Disputes, and Legal Processes

How long does a U.S. patent last?
Typically 20 years from the filing date for utility patents, with maintenance fees required.

Can patents be challenged after they’re issued?
Yes. They can be challenged in court or through USPTO post-grant proceedings such as IPR or PGR.

Do juries decide patent cases?
Often, yes. Juries commonly decide infringement, validity, and damages unless parties opt for a bench trial.

Can importing a product violate patent law?
It may violate an ITC exclusion order, which U.S. Customs enforces at the border.

👉 Further Reading: How Criminal Law Really Works — Inside the Principles That Shape Justice in America 👈

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About the Author

George Daniel
George Daniel has been a contributing legal writer for Lawyer Monthly since 2015, covering consumer rights, workplace law, and key developments across the U.S. justice system. With a background in legal journalism and policy analysis, his reporting explores how the law affects everyday life—from employment disputes and family matters to access-to-justice reform. Known for translating complex legal issues into clear, practical language, George has spent the past decade tracking major court decisions, legislative shifts, and emerging social trends that shape the legal landscape.
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