Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland & GMBH v. Genentech, Inc. , 473 F. App'x 885 ( 2012 )


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  •        NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    __________________________
    SANOFI-AVENTIS DEUTSCHLAND GMBH,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    GENENTECH, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    BIOGEN IDEC INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    __________________________
    2011-1397
    __________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of California in Case Nos. 08-CV-4909
    and 09-CV-4919, Judge Susan Illston.
    ____________________________
    Decided: March 22, 2012
    ____________________________
    WILLIAM E. SOLANDER, Fitzpatrick, Cella, Harper &
    Scinto, of New York, New York, argued for plaintiff-
    appellant. With him on the brief were DOMINICK A.
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                            2
    CONDE, NINA SHREVE, JOSHUA A. DAVIS and CHARLOTTE C.
    JACOBSEN.
    CHARLES K. VERHOEVEN, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &
    Sullivan, LLP, of San Francisco, California, argued for
    both defendants-appellees. With him on the brief were
    VICTORIA F. MAROULIS, ERIC E. WALL and GABRIEL S.
    GROSS. Of counsel on the brief were DONALD R. WARE,
    CLAIRE LAPORTE, JEREMY A. YOUNKIN and MARCO J.
    QUINA, Foley Hoag, LLP, of Boston, Massachusetts.
    __________________________
    Before NEWMAN, LOURIE, and PROST, Circuit Judges.
    LOURIE, Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiff-Appellant     Sanofi-Aventis    Deutschland
    GmbH (“Sanofi”) appeals from the decision of the United
    States District Court for the Northern District of Califor-
    nia granting summary judgment of noninfringement of its
    U.S. Patents 5,849,522 (“the ’522 patent”) and 6,218,140
    (“the ’140 patent”) in favor of Defendant-Appellees Genen-
    tech, Inc. (“Genentech”) and Biogen Idec Inc. (“Biogen”).
    Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH v. Genentech, Inc.,
    Nos. C 08-4909 SI, C 09-4919 SI, 
    2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28334
    , 
    2011 WL 839411
     (N.D. Cal. Mar. 7, 2011) (“Final
    Judgment”). Because we conclude that the district court
    did not err in its judgment, we affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The ’522 and ’140 patents, assigned to Sanofi, arose
    from the same patent family and share the same single-
    page written description, which discloses enhancer ele-
    3                             SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    ments derived from human cytomegalovirus (“HCMV”). 1
    Enhancers are discrete segments of DNA capable of
    enhancing the expression of one or more functionally
    associated gene(s) by upregulating transcription—the
    process of synthesizing RNA from a DNA template.
    Generally speaking, enhancers recruit and locally concen-
    trate certain proteins needed for transcription, leading to
    increased production of RNA from associated genes. The
    resulting abundance of RNA, once translated, yields
    correspondingly abundant protein expression. Enhancers
    are often found immediately upstream of enhancer-
    activated genes, but they can also function if placed
    downstream or even thousands of base pairs away from a
    gene. Once identified, enhancers often have considerable
    practical utility and have been adopted in the biotechnol-
    ogy and pharmaceutical industries to boost production
    efficiency for protein-based products. For example, by
    linking an enhancer to a gene encoding a biologic drug,
    researchers can often significantly improve yields from
    cells expressing that gene.
    The enhancer described in the ’522 and ’140 patents—
    first discovered within non-coding DNA located upstream
    of the highly expressed HCMV major immediate early
    (“IE”) gene—is particularly powerful and versatile, dem-
    onstrating activity across a wide spectrum of eukaryotic
    cell types. The ’522 patent claims methods of using the
    HCMV IE enhancer to increase expression of a gene in a
    mammalian cell, and the ’140 patent claims isolated
    HCMV IE enhancers, plasmid DNAs comprising an
    1  Through serial continuation applications, the ’522
    and ’140 patents both claim priority from German Patent
    Application No. 34 31 140.8, filed August 24, 1984. The
    ’522 patent was filed on June 6, 1995, and issued on
    December 15, 1998, and the ’140 patent was filed on
    November 9, 1994, and issued on April 17, 2001.
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                            4
    HCMV IE enhancer operatively linked to a heterologous
    gene, and eukaryotic host cells transformed with such
    plasmids.
    In 2008, Sanofi brought an action for infringement of
    the ’522 and ’140 patents, alleging that Appellees made
    use of an infringing HCMV IE enhancer in producing the
    antibody-based pharmaceuticals Rituxan® and Avastin®.
    In turn, Appellees filed a declaratory judgment complaint
    alleging invalidity and noninfringement, and the two
    actions were consolidated in the United States District
    Court for the Northern District of California. The district
    court held Markman proceedings and construed several
    disputed claim terms in each patent. Sanofi-Aventis
    Deutschland GmbH v. Genentech, Inc., Nos. C 08-4909 SI,
    C 09-4919 SI, 
    2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68875
    , 
    2010 WL 2525118
    , at *4–15 (N.D. Cal. June 23, 2010) (“Claim
    Construction Order”). In light of the claim construction
    decision, Appellees moved for summary judgment of
    noninfringement, which the district court granted. The
    court concluded that Appellees did not infringe the ’522 or
    ’140 patents literally or under the doctrine of equivalents
    in producing Rituxan® and Avastin®. Final Judgment,
    
    2011 WL 839411
    , at *4–15.
    Sanofi appealed, and we have jurisdiction pursuant to
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(1).
    II. DISCUSSION
    We review the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment of noninfringement and its underlying claim
    construction de novo. Laryngeal Mask Co. Ltd. v. Ambu
    A/S, 
    618 F.3d 1367
    , 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2010). Summary
    judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine dis-
    5                              SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    pute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    A. The ’522 Patent
    Sanofi asserted claims 1 and 2 of the ’522 patent. In-
    dependent claim 1 is representative for purposes of this
    appeal and reads as follows:
    1. A method to increase expression of a gene in a
    mammalian cell comprising inserting into the
    mammalian cell an isolated DNA enhancer con-
    sisting of DNA from the upstream region of the
    major immediate early (IE) gene of human cy-
    tomegalovirus (HCMV) and a heterologous gene
    that is to be expressed, wherein the DNA from the
    upstream region of the IE gene of HCMV is the
    only HCMV material to which the mammalian
    cell is exposed.
    ’522 patent col.2 l.63 – col.3 l.3 (emphases added). 2
    In the district court, the parties disputed the mean-
    ings of “isolated DNA enhancer” and “DNA from the
    upstream region of the major immediate early (IE) gene of
    human cytomegalovirus (HCMV).” In resolving those
    issues, the district court construed “isolated DNA enhan-
    cer” to mean
    2   Claim 2 depends from claim 1, imposing further
    limitations on the DNA that can constitute the isolated
    DNA enhancer recited in claim 1. See ’522 patent col.3
    ll.4–8. Because we agree with the district court that
    Appellees do not infringe claim 1, we need not separately
    address claim 2.
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                           6
    a DNA sequence, separated by human interven-
    tion from the promoter DNA in its original source,
    that (1) strongly stimulates transcription of a
    linked gene, (2) functions independent of orienta-
    tion, and (3) functions even if located long dis-
    tances upstream or downstream relative to the
    initiation site of the linked gene.
    Claim Construction Order, 
    2010 WL 2525118
    , at *5
    (emphases added). The district court next construed
    “DNA from the upstream region of the major immediate
    early (IE) gene of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV)” as
    “DNA from the region that is upstream of the transcrip-
    tion start site of the major IE gene of HCMV.” Id. at *7.
    On the issue of infringement, the district court held that
    Appellees did not infringe the ’522 patent because, inter
    alia, Appellees do not practice the step of “inserting” an
    isolated DNA enhancer into a mammalian cell. Final
    Judgment, 
    2011 WL 839411
    , at *4–6.
    1. Claim Construction
    a. The Isolated DNA Enhancer
    On appeal, Sanofi argues that the district court erred
    by defining “isolated DNA enhancer” to require the en-
    hancer to be “separated . . . from the promoter DNA in its
    original source.” Claim Construction Order, 
    2010 WL 2525118
    , at *5. Sanofi argues that the claimed “isolated
    DNA enhancer” can include the native HCMV promoter
    but concedes that it need not, pointing out that the ’522
    patent’s specification teaches that the HCMV enhancer
    can be used with or without the HCMV IE promoter. See
    ’522 patent col.2 ll.6–10, 43–56. Appellees respond that
    Sanofi disclaimed enhancer fragments that include the
    HCMV IE promoter during prosecution and that the
    7                             SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    disclosure excludes the promoter from its discussion of
    enhancer-active elements. We agree with the district
    court that the intrinsic evidence does not support Sanofi’s
    construction.
    We have held that an otherwise broadly defined term
    can be narrowed during prosecution through arguments
    made to distinguish prior art. Phillips v. AWH Corp., 
    415 F.3d 1303
    , 1317 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc). In this case,
    the applicants made such a disclaimer during prosecution
    of U.S. Patent Application No. 07/170,140—an ancestor of
    the application that eventually issued as the ’522 pat-
    ent—to overcome obviousness rejections against then-
    pending claims that recited an “isolated enhancer.”
    Specifically, the examiner had cited two references
    (Thomsen and Jahn) that disclose HCMV-derived DNA
    sequences encompassing the HCMV IE enhancer and
    promoter regions. In a response dated March 14, 1988,
    the applicants distinguished the cited art, as follows:
    [N]either of these primary references teaches the
    preparation of an isolated enhancer region as de-
    fined by the pending claims. . . . Thomsen et al.
    expressly discusses promoter sequences . . . .
    [Jahn] isolates and characterizes a variety of
    clones and illustrates several maps. The refer-
    ence does not appear to isolate an enhancer se-
    quence . . . .
    J.A. 806–07 (emphasis in original).
    Thus, the applicants distinguished their isolated en-
    hancer from the cited references, and such statements
    amount to “a clear and unmistakable disavowal of scope
    during prosecution” of the ’522 patent. Purdue Pharma
    L.P. v. Endo Pharms. Inc., 
    438 F.3d 1123
    , 1136 (Fed. Cir.
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                             8
    2006); see also Atofina v. Great Lakes Chem. Corp., 
    441 F.3d 991
    , 997–98 (Fed. Cir. 2006). Because Thomsen and
    Jahn disclose the entire HCMV IE regulatory region,
    including the claimed enhancer sequences, the applicants
    cast those references as general disclosures that failed to
    describe or isolate the HCMV enhancer from its native
    context within the surrounding viral sequences. More-
    over, the applicants underscored the presence of HCMV
    IE promoter sequences in Thomsen to distinguish that
    reference from the “isolated enhancer” recited in the
    pending claims. Hence, their claims must be interpreted
    to refer to the enhancer separated from the promoter, and
    we agree with the district court that the term “isolated
    DNA enhancer” requires an enhancer separated from the
    promoter DNA in its original source.
    b. The Upstream Region of the IE Gene
    In addition, Sanofi alleges error in the construction of
    the term “DNA from the upstream region of the major
    immediate early (IE) gene of human cytomegalovirus
    (HCMV),” which the district court interpreted to mean
    “DNA from the region that is upstream of the transcrip-
    tion start site of the major IE gene of HCMV.” Claim
    Construction Order, 
    2010 WL 2525118
    , at *7 (emphasis
    added). Sanofi contends that the term “DNA from the
    upstream region of the major immediate early (IE) gene of
    human cytomegalovirus (HCMV)” should be construed to
    mean “DNA from upstream of the translation start site of
    the major IE gene of HCMV.” According to Sanofi, the
    specification discloses the use of HCMV enhancers includ-
    ing portions of viral DNA extending beyond the transcrip-
    tion start site to the HCMV splice donor site at +120 or
    the downstream PstI site at approximately +930. See ’522
    patent col.2 ll.6–10, 44–56. To include those features,
    Sanofi argues, the claimed “upstream region of the major
    9                             SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    immediate early (IE) gene” must encompass the tran-
    scribed, but untranslated, region spanning the transcrip-
    tion and translation start sites of the HCMV IE gene at
    +1 and approximately +950, respectively. We disagree.
    A diagram of the HCMV IE gene, adapted from figure
    1a of the ’522 patent and marked to emphasize relevant
    points of reference, is shown below:
    Claim 1 recites the method of using an isolated DNA
    enhancer that consists of “DNA from the upstream region
    of the [HCMV IE gene],” and the specification uses consis-
    tent language in describing the HCMV enhancer’s posi-
    tion as “located in the upstream region of the [HCMV IE
    gene].” 
    Id.
     [57] (emphasis added); see also 
    id.
     col.1 ll.14–
    17. But the specification describes the location of the
    +120 splice donor site differently, with the key phrase
    “upstream region” notably absent. Rather, the specifica-
    tion describes the +120 splice donor sequence as the
    “splice donor consensus sequence of the IE gene.” 
    Id.
     col.2
    ll.8–9 (emphasis added). Thus, while the +120 splice
    donor site is indeed part of the IE gene, the specification
    reserves the “upstream region” label from its discussion of
    the splice donor site, indicating that the claim term “DNA
    from the upstream region of the [HCMV IE gene]” speci-
    fies a distinct portion of the broader IE gene that excludes
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                           10
    the splice donor site (+120), the downstream PstI site
    (+930), and the translation start site (+950). 3
    We therefore reject Sanofi’s contention that the down-
    stream end of the “upstream region” recited in claim 1
    extends to the translation start site of the IE gene, and
    we affirm the construction adopted by the district court.
    2. Infringement
    The district court held on summary judgment that
    Appellees do not infringe claims 1 or 2 of the ’522 patent
    because, among other reasons, Appellees do not practice
    the required step of “inserting” an isolated DNA enhancer
    into a mammalian cell. Final Judgment, 
    2011 WL 839411
    , at *4–6. We agree.
    In the district court, the parties stipulated that “in-
    serting,” as used in the ’522 patent, means “putting or
    introducing into.” Id. at *4. Furthermore, the parties
    agree that Appellees derived the cell lines used to produce
    Rituxan® and Avastin® by inserting foreign DNA into
    mammalian cells, but also that those acts occurred before
    the ’522 patent issued in 1998 and therefore cannot
    constitute infringement. Id.; see Monsanto Co. v. Syn-
    genta Seeds, Inc., 
    503 F.3d 1352
    , 1359–60 (Fed. Cir.
    2007). Sanofi nonetheless urges that Appellees literally
    perform the requisite infringing acts by propagating their
    existing cell lines, thereby “inserting” the foreign DNA
    into daughter cells with each round of mitosis. The ’522
    patent only teaches inserting foreign DNA via transfec-
    tion, however, and does not discuss cell division as a
    3    An “upstream region” that excludes the splice do-
    nor site at +120 must also exclude sites such as the PstI
    site and the translation start site located even further
    downstream.
    11                             SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    means for introducing foreign DNA. See ’522 patent col.1
    l.42, col.2 ll.20, 39. More fundamentally, Sanofi’s argu-
    ment contradicts basic scientific understanding and
    common sense. During mitosis, existing chromosomes
    replicate inside a cell, which then splits to produce identi-
    cal daughter cells containing the same DNA as the par-
    ent. DNA replicated during mitosis is not “put or
    introduced into” a cell; it is already there.
    We therefore agree with the district court that there
    is no genuine issue of material fact that Appellees do not
    literally infringe the asserted claims of the ’522 patent.
    Furthermore, we agree with the district court that Appel-
    lees do not infringe under the doctrine of equivalents
    because “inserting” extraneous DNA into a cell differs
    substantially from routine mitotic propagation, and a
    finding of equivalence would vitiate the claim term “in-
    serting.” See Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. eSpeed, Inc., 
    595 F.3d 1340
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2010). Because our affirmance
    of the district court’s conclusion that the claims are not
    infringed on the ground that Appellees do not insert
    enhancer DNA into a mammalian cell is sufficient to
    dispose of Sanofi’s infringement allegations regarding the
    ’522 patent, we need not review the application of the
    claim terms “isolated DNA enhancer” and “DNA from the
    upstream region of the [HCMV IE gene]” to Appellees’
    activities. As noted above, however, we have affirmed the
    district court’s construction of those terms.
    B. The ’140 Patent
    Sanofi asserted claims 42–45 of the ’140 patent.
    Claims 42 and 45 each claim a “recombinant DNA plas-
    mid” comprising an enhancer-active DNA molecule iso-
    lated from the HCMV IE gene operatively linked to a
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                            12
    heterologous gene. Claims 43 and 44 claim eukaryotic
    host cells transformed with such a plasmid.
    Regarding the pivotal claim term “recombinant DNA
    plasmid,” the parties offered conflicting interpretations of
    the word “plasmid.” That term is absent from the written
    description of the ’140 patent. The district court looked to
    U.S. Patent 5,168,062 (“Stinski”) as important intrinsic
    evidence of the meaning of “plasmid,” as the term first
    appeared in the ’140 patent in claims copied from Stinski
    and because the examiner cited Stinski as the basis of
    rejections during prosecution of the ’140 patent. 
    Id.
     at
    *10–11. In relevant part, Stinski defines a “plasmid” as
    “a closed ring,” “not linked to the chromosome of the host
    cell.” Stinski col.3 ll.1–8, 19. Accordingly, the district
    court adopted Biogen’s proposed construction defining
    “plasmid” to mean a “circular, extrachromosomal mole-
    cule.” Claim Construction Order, 
    2010 WL 2525118
    , at
    *11.
    Having adopted Biogen’s proposed definition of “plas-
    mid,” the district court then held that Appellees do not
    infringe the asserted claims because the heterologous
    DNA used to produce Rituxan® and Avastin® is linear
    and integrated rather than circular and extrachromo-
    somal. Final Judgment, 
    2011 WL 839411
    , at *11–14.
    1. Claim Construction
    Sanofi argues that the district court erred in its con-
    struction of “plasmid,” contending that the ordinary
    meaning of the term includes both circular and linear
    forms and that the district court incorrectly treated
    Stinski as controlling intrinsic evidence. Sanofi main-
    tains that “plasmid” should be defined more broadly as a
    sequence of DNA “that may be linear or circular and that
    13                            SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    may exist in an extrachromosomal state or integrated into
    a cell’s chromosome.”
    As noted, the word “plasmid” appears nowhere in the
    written description of the ’140 patent; the term first
    appeared when the applicants copied claims from Stinski
    during prosecution. But the ’140 patent discloses two
    examples of plasmids, both of which are circular and
    extrachromosomal, see ’140 patent col.2 ll.45–56, and that
    evidence from the patent itself accords with the district
    court’s construction. Furthermore, the district court
    correctly recognized Stinski, which the examiner cited
    during prosecution, as sufficiently intrinsic evidence for
    purposes of interpreting the ’140 patent. See Phillips, 415
    F.3d at 1317 (“The prosecution history, which we have
    designated as part of the ‘intrinsic evidence,’ consists of
    the complete record of the proceedings before the PTO
    and includes the prior art cited during the examination of
    the patent.”). Given the scant insights offered within the
    ’140 patent concerning the meaning of “plasmid,” the
    consistent teachings of Stinski, and the lack of other
    countervailing evidence from the intrinsic record, we
    discern no error in the district court’s construction.
    Sanofi complains that the district court’s construction
    unduly limits the ordinary meaning of the term “plasmid,”
    offering expert testimony and various other pieces of
    extrinsic evidence that it claims more accurately reflect
    the perspective of those skilled in the art at the time of
    the invention. But Appellees counter Sanofi’s arguments
    with a contrary array of extrinsic evidence and note that
    the available intrinsic evidence supports the district
    court’s construction. We cannot agree that Sanofi’s sub-
    missions outweigh the intrinsic evidence. As we held in
    Phillips, “extrinsic evidence may be useful to the court,
    but it is unlikely to result in a reliable interpretation of
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                           14
    patent claim scope unless considered in the context of the
    intrinsic evidence.” Id. at 1319. Regardless of what
    meaning may be attributed to the term “plasmid” in other
    contexts and at other times, its meaning in the instant
    patent, having an effective filing date of August 24, 1984,
    is as a circular, extrachromosomal piece of DNA.
    Sanofi also argues that the district court’s construc-
    tion would render claim 43 “internally inconsistent”
    because that claim recites “[a] eukaryotic host cell trans-
    formed with a recombinant DNA plasmid.” ’140 patent
    col.5 ll.8–9 (emphasis added). Sanofi argues that “the
    ordinary understanding of a transformed cell is one in
    which the plasmid is integrated,” that is, linearized and
    integrated into a host chromosome. Br. for Plaintiff-
    Appellant at 37. The parties agreed before the claim
    construction hearing, however, that “transformed” means
    “altered to include foreign DNA,” J.A. 650, and that
    definition can indicate the result of a transient transfec-
    tion with circular, extrachromosomal DNA as well as
    indicating the integration of extraneous linear DNA into a
    chromosome, but it does not compel Sanofi’s interpreta-
    tion. Furthermore, the only such “transformed” cells
    described in the ’140 patent resulted from transient
    transfection, not integration. See ’140 patent col.2 ll.53–
    56. Sanofi’s argument is therefore unavailing.
    We have considered Sanofi’s remaining arguments
    and find them unpersuasive. Accordingly, we affirm the
    district court’s construction of “plasmid” as a “circular,
    extrachromosomal molecule.”
    2. Infringement
    The district court held on summary judgment that
    Appellees do not infringe claims 42–45 of the ’140 patent
    15                            SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH
    literally or under the doctrine of equivalents. On appeal,
    Sanofi challenges only the holding of noninfringement
    under the doctrine of equivalents, arguing that the dis-
    trict court incorrectly conflated literal infringement with
    the doctrine of equivalents and mischaracterized the
    function of the claimed plasmid for purposes of the
    equivalents analysis. Sanofi maintains that the differ-
    ences between the claimed circular extrachromosomal
    plasmids and Appellees’ linear, integrated DNAs are
    insubstantial because both provide the same genetic
    information and therefore achieve the same heterologous
    protein expression in the same way.
    We agree with the district court that Sanofi cannot
    rely on the doctrine of equivalents because doing so would
    vitiate the “plasmid” limitation of each asserted claim.
    Patentees may not assert “a theory of equivalence [that]
    would entirely vitiate a particular claim element.” War-
    ner-Jenkinson Co. v. Hilton Davis Chem. Co., 
    520 U.S. 17
    ,
    39 n.8 (1997). Sanofi argues that the claimed “recombi-
    nant DNA plasmid” provides “a fixed arrangement of
    those pieces of DNA required for gene expression by the
    cell’s transcriptional machinery,” and that linear or
    circular DNA can perform this function in the same way
    to achieve the same result. Br. for Plaintiff-Appellant at
    44–45. But such a theory of equivalence of the claimed
    “recombinant DNA plasmid” focuses on the functions
    attributable to “recombinant DNA” and ignores the
    “plasmid” requirement. Although recombinant DNA in
    both linear and integrated, or circular and extrachromo-
    somal, forms are capable of providing a template for gene
    expression, the claims call for achieving that function
    with a “plasmid”—defined here as a circular, extrachro-
    mosomal molecule.
    SANOFI-AVENTIS   v. GENENTECH                            16
    To find equivalence in this situation would be to read
    the “plasmid” element out of the claims entirely, which
    the district court correctly declined to do. See SciMed Life
    Sys., Inc. v. Advanced Cardiovascular Sys., Inc., 
    242 F.3d 1337
    , 1347 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“[I]f a patent states that the
    claimed device must be ‘non-metallic,’ the patentee cannot
    assert the patent against a metallic device on the ground
    that a metallic device is equivalent to a non-metallic
    device.”). The Appellees were therefore entitled to sum-
    mary judgment of noninfringement of the asserted claims
    of the ’140 patent.
    III. CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we affirm the final judgment of the dis-
    trict court.
    AFFIRMED