The court disagreed with plaintiff for two reasons. First, Judge Sullivan noted that “put simply, the PTO Ruling is not binding on this court, nor is it binding on the Federal Circuit.” Second, “[plaintiff] has repeatedly sought and has been repeatedly denied reconsideration of the 2006 Markman ruling based on the contrary construction in [another case involving the same patent]. The fact that the PTO ruling is apparently consistent with [that other case] does not alter the court's conclusion about whether reconsideration is warranted, nor does it undermine the soundness of the 2006 Markman ruling.” In closing, the court held that “other than a generic invocation of judicial economy, [plaintiff] fails to provide any rationale for the court to suddenly be swayed by a contrary construction.”
Enzo Biochem, Inc., et al v. Molecular Probes, 103cv03816 (S.D.N.Y. December 10, 2014).