SMART726 v. De Sousa: Garment Patent Case Dismissed at Federal Circuit

📄 Voir le rapport complet 📥 Exporter au format PDF 🔗 Partager ⭐ Enregistrer

📋 Résumé de l'affaire

Nom de l'affaireSMART726 v. Michelle E. De Sousa
Numéro de dossier26-1420 (Fed. Cir.)
TribunalCircuit fédéral, appel du district de Columbia
DuréeFeb 9, 2026 – Feb 23, 2026 14 Days
RésultatDismissed by Mutual Agreement
Brevet en cause
Produits incriminésGarment and brassiere accessory

Aperçu du dossier

In a swift resolution that lasted just 14 days, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit closed Case No. 26-1420 — SMART726 v. Michelle E. De Sousa — after the parties reached a mutual agreement to dismiss the appeal. Filed on February 9, 2026, and closed by February 23, 2026, this garment and brassiere accessory patent infringement dispute centered on U.S. Patent No. 8,152,591 B2, a wearable apparel innovation.

While the dismissal forecloses a published appellate ruling, the case carries meaningful signals for IP professionals and patent litigants in the apparel and wearable accessories sector. The voluntary dismissal under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 42(b) — with each party bearing its own costs — suggests either a negotiated resolution or a strategic withdrawal, both of which reflect patterns increasingly common in consumer product patent litigation at the appellate level.

For patent attorneys tracking Federal Circuit dispositions, IP professionals monitoring garment accessory patent trends, and R&D teams assessing freedom-to-operate risks in wearable apparel, this case offers concise but instructive lessons.

Les parties

⚖️ Demandeur

SMART726

Identified as the patent-asserting party, likely an IP holding or assertion entity in the apparel sector, monetizing innovations through licensing or litigation.

🛡️ Défendeur

Michelle E. De Sousa

Named individually, suggesting a small business operator, independent designer, or entrepreneur in the garment accessories market.

Le brevet en cause

This case involved U.S. Patent No. 8,152,591 B2, covering a garment and brassiere accessory innovation. Patents in this category typically address structural, functional, or aesthetic improvements to undergarment support systems, straps, or connective hardware.

🔍

Designing a similar apparel product?

Check if your garment design might infringe this or related patents before launch.

Lancer la vérification FTO →

Le verdict et l'analyse juridique

Chronologie du litige et historique de la procédure

The appeal was filed directly with the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, the exclusive appellate venue for U.S. patent matters, indicating that prior proceedings had concluded at the district court level — most likely in the District of Columbia — before the matter was elevated.

Appel interjetéFebruary 9, 2026
Affaire classée23 février 2026
Durée totale14 jours

The 14-day lifecycle from filing to closure is extraordinarily brief for Federal Circuit proceedings, where even routine motions typically require weeks to resolve. This compressed timeline almost certainly reflects a pre-negotiated resolution, with the appeal filed to preserve rights or enforce a settlement agreement already in progress at the time of filing.

No information regarding the district court proceedings — including claim construction orders, summary judgment motions, or trial-level findings — is available in the current record. The absence of a substantive appellate ruling means no claim construction analysis or validity determination was issued by the Federal Circuit.

Résultat

The Federal Circuit ordered the proceeding dismissed under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 42(b), the voluntary dismissal mechanism requiring either stipulation of the parties or court approval. The order further specified that each side shall bear its own costs — a standard provision in mutually agreed dismissals that signals neither party extracted a clear cost-shifting victory.

No damages figure was disclosed. No injunctive relief was granted or denied on the merits.

Analyse des causes du verdict

The case was classified as an infringement action, meaning SMART726’s underlying claim alleged that De Sousa’s garment accessory product infringed one or more claims of US 8,152,591 B2. However, because the matter resolved before any Federal Circuit merits briefing or oral argument, no judicial analysis of infringement, validity, or claim construction is available from this proceeding.

The mutual cost-bearing provision is analytically significant: in patent cases where a plaintiff achieves a favorable settlement, defendants often bear costs as part of the resolution terms. The symmetrical cost allocation here suggests either a nuanced settlement with non-monetary components, or a recognition by both parties that continued litigation carried disproportionate risk or expense relative to the stakes involved.

Signification juridique

Because the dismissal was voluntary and without prejudice to any stated legal principle, Case No. 26-1420 carries no direct precedential value for garment patent claim construction or infringement doctrine. The Federal Circuit issued no opinion on the merits of US 8,152,591 B2’s validity or scope.

However, the case contributes to a documented pattern of early appellate dismissals in consumer product patent disputes involving individual defendants and IP assertion entities — a trend with meaningful implications for how such cases are evaluated at filing and how quickly they resolve when litigation economics are asymmetric.

⚠️

Freedom to Operate (FTO) Analysis for Garment IP

This swift dismissal highlights IP risks in the competitive garment accessory market. Choose your next step:

📋 Comprendre l'impact de cette affaire

Learn about the specific risks and implications from this litigation in the apparel sector.

  • View related patents in the garment accessory space
  • See which companies are most active in wearable IP
  • Understand dismissal patterns in consumer product IP
📊 Voir le paysage des brevets
⚠️
Zone à haut risque

Brassiere accessory designs

📋
1 brevet actif

In garment accessory space

Early Dismissal Trend

Courant dans la propriété intellectuelle des produits de consommation

✅ Points clés à retenir

Pour les avocats spécialisés en brevets et les avocats plaidants

Voluntary Federal Circuit dismissals under FRCP 42(b) with mutual cost-bearing may signal pre-appeal settlements — track these patterns for portfolio valuation insights.

Rechercher la jurisprudence connexe →

US 8,152,591 B2 remains an active, asserted patent in the garment accessory space — monitor for future enforcement activity.

Explorer les précédents →

The 14-day appellate lifecycle suggests pre-negotiated resolution; consider structured settlement timelines in similar matters.

Analyser les tendances en matière de litiges →
🔒
Unlock R&D and IP Strategy for Wearable Tech
Get actionable IP strategy steps for product teams in apparel, including FTO timing guidance and competitive landscape insights.
Apparel FTO Guidance Competitive IP Landscape Design-Around Strategies
Découvrez l'analyse complète dans PatSnap Eureka

Foire aux questions

Prêt à renforcer votre stratégie en matière de brevets ?

Rejoignez plus de 18 000 professionnels de la propriété intellectuelle qui utilisent PatSnap Eureka pour effectuer des recherches d'antériorité, rédiger des brevets et analyser le paysage concurrentiel avec une précision optimisée par l'IA.

Équipe PatSnap IP Intelligence

Recherche en matière de brevets et veille concurrentielle · PatSnap

Cette analyse a été réalisée par l'équipe PatSnap IP Intelligence, composée d'analystes en brevets, de stratèges en propriété intellectuelle et de scientifiques des données qui travaillent quotidiennement avec la base de données mondiale de PatSnap, qui regroupe plus de 2 milliards de données structurées issues de brevets, de dossiers de litiges, de publications scientifiques et de documents réglementaires.

L'équipe est spécialisée dans le suivi des décisions judiciaires marquantes, la traduction de jugements complexes en stratégies concrètes en matière de propriété intellectuelle, ainsi que l'identification des implications en matière de veille concurrentielle pour les équipes de R&D et les services juridiques. Toutes les analyses de cas s'appuient sur des sources primaires : dossiers judiciaires officiels, dépôts auprès de l'USPTO et arrêts de la Cour d'appel fédérale.

📊 Plus de 2 milliards de données sur les brevets 🌍 Plus de 120 pays couverts 🏢 Plus de 18 000 clients dans le monde ⚖️ Base de données mondiale sur les litiges 🔍 Sources primaires vérifiées

Références

  1. United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit — Case 26-1420
  2. USPTO Patent Full-Text Database — US8152591B2
  3. PACER — Federal Court Records
  4. Institut d'information juridique de Cornell — Règle fédérale de procédure d'appel 42(b)

Cet article est publié à titre purement informatif et ne constitue en aucun cas un avis juridique. Toutes les informations relatives aux affaires sont tirées de dossiers judiciaires accessibles au public. Pour en savoir plus sur les fonctionnalités de la plateforme, rendez-vous sur PatSnap.

⚖️ Avertissement : cet article est fourni à titre informatif uniquement et ne constitue pas un avis juridique. L'analyse présentée reflète les informations publiques disponibles sur les affaires et les principes juridiques généraux. Pour obtenir des conseils spécifiques concernant les litiges en matière de brevets, l'analyse FTO ou la stratégie en matière de propriété intellectuelle, veuillez consulter un avocat spécialisé en brevets.