550 U.S. 544 (2007) Cited 280,791 times 369 Legal Analyses
Holding that allegations of conduct that are merely consistent with wrongdoing do not state a claim unless "placed in a context that raises a suggestion of" such wrongdoing
Holding that pleading "the process for" using the accused product in an infringing way "has no other substantial non-infringing use" is not the same as pleading the accused product contains a component that can only infringe, and therefore fails to state a claim for contributory infringement
Finding that the autonomy factor “cut both ways,” even though the entity had the “power to enter into contracts, sue and be sued, and purchase and sell property in its own name”
Holding that a plaintiff had properly stated a common law civil conspiracy claim by alleging that the parties to the conspiracy intentionally acted together to sell a property without paying the plaintiff a commission for work performed, resulting in monetary damage to the plaintiff
Holding that software manufacturer did not infringe patent comprising "personal computer data processing means" because "[t]he customer, not Qwest, complete[d] the system by providing the 'personal data processing means' and installing the client software"
Holding district court did not err by declining to construe the terms "irrigating" and "frictional heat" and "relying on the ordinary meanings of these terms"
Finding a pleading of contributory infringement barely sufficient because Plaintiff "allege[d] that defendant 'has had actual knowledge and constructive notice of the [patent at issue] at all relevant times,' and provide[d] a concreteexample of an occasion on which defendant would have received such notice."
Fed. R. Civ. P. 84 Cited 1,037 times 7 Legal Analyses
Explaining that the appended forms "are sufficient under the rules and are intended to indicate the simplicity and brevity of statement which the rules contemplate"