In a 135-page decision published on Friday by a strongly divided court, the 10 judges on the en banc panel issued seven conflicting opinions on whether Alice’s claims relating to a computerised trading system are patent-eligible.
Seven of the judges affirmed the district court’s ruling that the method and computer-readable media claims are not patent eligible. The judges were equally divided on whether the system claims were patent eligible, meaning that the district court’s decision was upheld.
In a dissenting-in-part opinion joined by three other judges, Judge Moore said the decision would lead to the "death" of hundreds of thousands of software and business method patents. She said the decision gave "staggering breadth to what is meant to be a narrow judicial exception".
She added: “There has never been a case which could do more damage to the patent system than this one.” In an opinion titled “Additional reflections”, Chief JudgeRader lamented that there was “little, if any, agreement amongst” the judges.
The disagreement between the judges may lead to the case being taken up by the Supreme Court.
The Court was rehearing the case after overturning its controversial 2-1 panel decision in July last year to affirm Alice’s patent claims for a computerised trading system that minimises risk.
In the previous split decision, the judges concluded that merely using a computer did not prevent Alice’s claims from being regarded as patent-ineligible abstract ideas. However, the 2-1 majority said that computer implementation was crucial to the system’s function as an intermediary between traders.
The case dates back to CLS's 2007 lawsuit which sought to invalidate Alice's patents. Alice counterclaimed that CLS was infringing claims 33 and 34 of its US patent number 5,970,479 and all claims of its US patents numbers 6,912,510; 7,149,720; and 7,725,375.