Gigaom reports the patent troll bills have been delayed. Patent Progress has an outline of twelve patent reform bills being considered.
Macrosolve settles patent lawsuits
Patent reform: innovation or litigation meet up in DC
Patdek - leveraging actionable patent-related information
Patdek for patent-related searches is coming
Dargaye Churnet's proposal for patent applications
D. Casey Flaherty - law firms should solve problems through technology
Attending PTO Software Partnership Meeting - Berkley
Attending Developer Patent Summit - Washington, DC
Lithosphere Software will be attending the Developer Patent Summit in Washington, DC tomorrow being run by the Application Developers Alliance. In advance of this meeting, I'll be re-reading the GAO patent report from August 2013 and reviewing Colleen Chien's recently published Patent Assertion and Startup Innovation report about NPE activity.
There seems to be a convergence of thought around NPE activity - it's not that NPEs are necessarily the problem, but rather that "bad patents" are the problem. If this position is correct,
Mann Law Group says "about $20 billion goes to defendant's counsel" in patent litigations
The actual number is under $7 billion. Where is the disconnect? Phillip Mann, of the Mann Law Group, blogged about a New York Times article on July 15, 2013. In that blog he arrived at his $20 billion fee estimate going to defense lawyers.
The NY Times article referenced by Mr. Mann is titled "Has Patent, Will Sue: An Alert to Corporate America." The article is about Erich Spangenberg of IPNav. IPNav is often referred to as a Non-Practicing Entity in patent litigation circles.
Model order proposed limits - advantage patent owner
The Model Order benefits a patent owner more than a defendant. Patent owners maintain an advantage by waiting to just before trial to identify claims to a defendant. The Model Order does speed up this identification to the benefit of the defendant. But the tradeoff for limiting claims under the Model Order is a drastic reduction in prior art references available to a defendant.
Federal Circuit Advisory Council Model Order Limiting Excess Patent Claims and Prior Art
Timeline helps in establishing diligence to amend invalidity contentions
In Positive Technologies, Inc. v. Sony Electronics, Inc. (January 28, 2013), Judge Illston (Northern District of California) granted Defendants Amazon.com, Inc.'s and Barnes & Nobles, Inc.'s motion to amend their invalidity contentions to add "conforming amendments" and "new-art amendments". Both amendments are said to relate to the Court's claim construction order. The Court focuses on the two aspects of good cause for the proposed amendments, including diligence in discovery the new information and the passage of time in seeking to add the new information to the contentions once discovered. Defendants argue that the amendments, particularly the new prior art, relate to an expansive claim construction concerning two types of devices covered in the Court's claim construction order. Although six months elapsed between the claim construction order and when the Defendants located the new prior art, the detail surrounding Defendants' efforts appears to have persuaded the Court the allow the proposed amendments. In this case, the Court ruled that since fact discovery had not yet closed, and in light of Plaintiff failing to articulate whether the prior art was relevant, whether Defendants were engaging in "gamesmanship" for the amendments, and what type of prejudice would result to the Plaintiff, the Court permitted the proposed amendments.
Takeaways - it appears to be increasingly relevant to track the timing contention efforts once the initial contentions have been served. Details on these activities remain important to the Court when considering proposed amendments to invalidity contentions.
Notice under 35 USC 282 too late for new prior art
Off Topic - for international travel, rent a MiFi
Newly asserted method claims provide basis for invalidity contention supplement
In Medtronic Corevalve LLC v. Edwards Lifesciences Corp. (June 25, 2012), Judge Selna (Central District of California) granted Defendant Edwards' request to supplement its invalidity contentions to add additional prior art references. The main basis for Defendant Edwards' request focused on a new search conducted by defendant after plaintiff asserted additional method claims in the litigation. The Court focused on Patent Local Rule 3-6 of the Central District of California to consider permitting the requested supplements. The Court explained that it
must first consider whether [Defendant] Edwards acted diligently in discovering the bases for the amendment and whether Edwards timely moved for leave to amend.
(Order at 3).
The Court analyzed when the references were first identified by the Defendant, and then how long thereafter that the motion for leave to amend was filed. As for prejudice, the Court noted that Plaintiff Medtronic has taken the position that is own infringement contentions are "preliminary," and thus it would be unfair for Medtronic to reserve its right to amend, while not granting that same benefit to Defendant.
In further analyzing potential prejudice, the Court summarized another argument raised by Plaintiff:
On the other hand, Medtronic contends that it will be prejudiced by the amendment because the parties will have exchanged their claim terms and proposed constructions by June 20, 2012, five days before this motion will be heard by the Court. (Opp'n Br. 11.) Therefore, Medtronic "will ... be forced to approach the early stages of claim construction without knowing whether the new references will be allowed into the case." (Id.) Furthermore, Medtronic worries that if good cause for the amendment is found her, Edwards will "almost certainly continue its 'search and analysis of relevant prior art'" and seek leave to amend the invalidity contentions again in the future. (Id. at 12.)
The Court rejected this argument reasoning that the claim construction briefing is not due for several months, the trial is more than a year away, and further requests to supplement will require additional motion practice. (Order at 6-7).
Takeaways - Diligence is the main focus of these types of motions. Again, however, we see the consideration of a "claim construction" impact when evaluating a proposed invalidity contention supplement. This prejudice to the claim construction process seems to be the main argument raised by a plaintiff when facing supplement requests.
Rejected claim constructions pave way for invalidity contention supplement
In Baden Sports, Inc. v. Wilson Sporting Goods Co. (June 28, 2012), Judge Pechman (Western District of Washington) granted Defendant Wilson's request to supplement its invalidity contentions to add additional prior art references. The main basis for Defendant Wilson's request focused on the Court's adoption of Plaintiff's proposed constructions for each of the four disputed terms. In permitting the requested supplement, the Court focuses on Local Patent Rule W.D. Wash. 124 of the Western District of Washington and notes that amendments to contentions require a "showing of good cause ... absent undue prejudice to the non-moving party." (Order at 2). The Court identified five factors underlying a good cause analysis including:
"(1) the reasons proffered for the need to amend after the deadline for submitting contentions had passed, (2) the diligence of the moving party, (3) the importance of the proposed amendments, together with any prejudice to the moving party if amendment is denied, (4) potential prejudice to the non-moving party, and (5) the availability of a continuance to cure any prejudice." Convolve, Inc. v. Compaq Computer Corp., 2007 WL 700904 at *2 (S.D.N.Y Mar. 7, 2007).
In considering Defendant Wilson' request, the Court noted that it "adopted none of Wilson's proposed claim constructions." (Order at 2). Following the claim construction order, Wilson initiated an expanded search in light of the broader construction of the term "seam." The Court recognized that although "Wilson should have perhaps conducted that broader search earlier, it is reasonable to grant leave given the completely adverse outcome of the Markman hearing, which is the precise situation contemplated by LPR 124." (Order at 3).
As to diligence, Wilson conducted the search quickly, updated its contentions with the new information, and shortly thereafter moved to supplement. The Court dispensed with any claim of prejudice noting that "the amendments are relatively minor and there is still time to allow Baden to conduct discovery and expert analysis relating to the amended material." (Order at 3).
Takeaways - Diligence remains the main consideration for supplemental contentions. Although the Court noted that Wilson likely should not have been so limiting in its initial search, the Court balanced the factors and permitted the supplement. This process raises a question though - how was Wilson expected to know precisely the breadth of Plaintiff's proposed constructions when it served its invalidity contentions prior to the parties exchanging claim construction positions?
Cases weighing invalidity contention impact on claim construction process
We're going through our invalidity contention decisions database to identify cases where a Court's decision considers the impact of supplemental invalidity contentions on the claim construction process under local patent rules. We previously identified the following cases in other blog posts:
- CardSoft, Inc. v. VeriFone Systems, Inc. (May 28, 2012), Judge Payne (Eastern District of Texas)
- Nano-Second Technology Co., Ltd. v. Dynaflex Int'l (June 6, 2012), Judge Lew (Central District of California)
- Bayer Cropscience AG v. Dow Agrosciences LLC (June 7, 2012), Judge Schneider (District of Delaware)
We'll review our database of 85+ cases and eventually identify all relevant cases for this topic.
To start things off, let's consider Play Visions, Inc. v. Dollar Tree Stores, Inc. (November 30, 2010), Judge Pechman (Western District of Washington).
In this case, Judge Pechman granted Defendants' request to amend their preliminary invalidity contentions finding good cause for the proposed amendment, relying on Local Patent Rule LR 124. The Court first determined that the Defendants had been diligent in searching for prior art, and that the contentions supplement were timely provided, with the motion to amend the contentions was filed roughly two months after the contention deadline.
The Court weighed the potential prejudice to the plaintiff and determined that
There is no evidence of prejudice given that the parties have yet to engage in claims [sic] construction and discovery does not end for months.
(Order at 4). Again we see a focus on the claim construction impact with respect to invalidity contentions supplement. Here, the Court was entirely focused on prejudice to a party under the guise of claim construction. From the outset, the Court frames the issue:
Restrictions on amendment to invalidity contentions are aimed at avoiding the "shifting sands" approach to claim construction. See Halo Elecs., Inc. v. Bel Fuse Inc., 2010 WL 3489593, at *1 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 3, 2010) (granting motion for leave to amend invalidity contentions where the defendants argued they search diligently over a broad spectrum of prior art).
(Order at 2). So again, the focus remains on whether allowing supplemental contentions will in some way impact claim construction discovery. We've already explained our viewpoint that Phillips is at odds with how the local patent rules are being applied when prior art supplements are linked to the claim construction process.
We'll continue to report our findings in subsequent posts.
Claim construction process is not helped by invalidity contentions
In an earlier post, I discussed the following:
I don't believe the rules were intended to exclude prior art because a plaintiff lacked non-intrinsic prior art during the claim construction process. I continue to look at the evolution of the local rules for linkage between invalidity contentions and claim construction. It would be helpful if someone could point me to any local patent rule comments on this issue. I'm particularly interested in comments detailing why invalidity contentions must precede claim construction. Is it to allow the patent owner to craft proposed constructions in light of prior art (extrinsic evidence)? What principle of claim construction would that be based on?
Here are some further thoughts, after rereading and studying some cases. First, for a district court civil action, "[t]he role [of claim construction] is neither to limit nor broaden the claim, but to define, as a matter of law, the invention that has been patented." Netword, LLC v. Centraal Corp., 242 F.3d 1347, 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2001). Nothing controversial there.
Next, we have the following notion that the rules of claim construction state that claims may not be revised to ignore explicit claim language. See Generation II Orthotics Inc. v. Med. Tech. Inc., 263 F.3d 1356, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2001) ("claims can only be construed to preserve their validity where the proposed claim construction is 'practicable,' is based on sound claim construction principles, and does not revise or ignore the explicit language of the claims."). Essentially, claims may not be redrafted.
Taking these ideas further, it's not a stretch to surmise that invalidity contentions may impact the validity of the claims subject to construction, but that should not matter for purposes of defining the scope of the invention. Lucent Technologies, Inc. v. Gateway, Inc., 525 F.3d 1200, 125-26 (Fed. Cir. 2008) ("This court has repeatedly held that courts may not redraft claims to cure a drafting error made by the patentee, whether to make them operable or to sustain their validity. To do so 'would unduly interfere with the function of claims in putting competitors on notice of the scope of the claimed invention.'")
So what to make of the "preserving claim validity" maxim? It would seem reasonable that the "preserving claim validity" maxim should only be invoked in such narrow circumstances where "'the court concludes, after applying all the available tools of claim construction, that the claim is still ambiguous.'" Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1327 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc) (citing Liebel-Flarsheim Co. v. Medrad, Inc., 358 F.3d 898, 911 (Fed. Cir. 2004)).
If all this is accurate, why are invalidity contentions required before the claim construction process has even started under local patent rules? Are we presuming that claims will remain ambiguous after applying all available tools of claim construction? Certainly requiring contentions before claim construction may be expedient, but what is being accomplished. Moreover, prior art is applied to properly construed claims, so claim construction necessarily comes first. Consider that Phillips specifically states
[W]e have certainly not endorsed a regime in which validity analysis is a regular component of claim construction.
Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1327 (emphasis added); see also Rhine v. Casio, Inc., 183 F.3d 1342, 1345 (Fed. Cir. 1999) ("if the only claim construction that is consistent with the claim's language and the written description renders the claim invalid, then the axiom does not apply and the claim is simply invalid.").
If validity analysis is not a regular component of claim construction, should we consider a change to patent local rules where claim construction discovery precedes contentions, instead of the current practice?
Court declines supplement to invalidity contentions despite importance
In CardSoft, Inc. v. VeriFone Systems, Inc. (May 28, 2012), Judge Payne (Eastern District of Texas) denied Defendant VeriFone's request to supplement its invalidity contentions to add two additional prior art references. In denying the requested supplement, the Court focuses on Patent Local Rule 3-6(b) of the Eastern District of Texas and notes that amendments to contentions require a "showing of good cause." (Order at 1). The four standard factors underlying a good cause analysis included: (1) explanation for party's failure to timely move for leave to amend; (2) importance of the amendment; (3) potential prejudice resulting from amendment; and (4) availability of continuance to cure prejudice. The Court then determined that the defendant was not diligent because it should have investigated prior art processing terminals based on plaintiff's identification of alleged infringing products.
The Court explained:
The Court is not satisfied that VeriFone acted diligently to discover the Omni 300 and OTA prior art. These references are related to VeriFone's own products, which it should have uncovered even if CardSoft never accused the Omni 3200 payment terminals of infringement. Furthermore, it took VeriFone nearly eight months to produce the references, and then another four months to disclose its invalidity contentions based upon the references. The Court is not persuaded that this shows diligence on VeriFone's part. Verifone's lack of an adequate explanation to explain its delay weighs strongly against granting leave.
(Order at 3).
In the end, the Court was not persuaded that diligence was shown. We were surprised at how the Court resolved the other good cause prongs involving prejudice. As to prejudice, the Court explained:
The importance of these references are quite clear, which weighs in favor of granting VeriFone leave to amend. However, their importance only adds to the prejudice suffered by CardSoft because it was deprived of a meaningful opportunity to consider these references during the claim construction process. Because claim construction was nearly over by the time VeriFone disclosed its invalidity contentions based on the Omni 300 and OTA prior art, and claim construction is now complete, a continuance is not available to cure CardSoft's prejudice.
If the impact on claim construction was not an appropriate factor for invalidity contention supplements, there would be little, if any, prejudice to CardSoft. Maybe the supplement request would have been granted. As we previously suggested here and here, the link between invalidity contentions and claim construction prejudice is tenuous. In this case, the prior art is not part of the intrinsic evidence, and the court noted the importance of the prior art references, yet the supplement request was denied. Although claim construction was concluded, should that fact really impact the inclusion of additional invalidity contentions? The claims mean what they mean. If the claims encompass the prior art then it is what it is.
Takeaways - Diligence is the paramount consideration for supplemental contentions. This ruling indicates that although Defendant VeriFone continued its prior art investigation at a measured pace, the defendant did not move quick enough. Tough case, tough decision. I would prefer not to see the balance of a decision rest on how an invalidity contention supplement impacts claim construction as a reason for denying the supplement. I don't believe the rules were intended to exclude prior art because a plaintiff lacked non-intrinsic prior art during the claim construction process. I continue to look at the evolution of the local rules for linkage between invalidity contentions and claim construction. It would be helpful if someone could point me to any local patent rule comments on this issue. I'm particularly interested in comments detailing why invalidity contentions must precede claim construction. Is it to allow the patent owner to craft proposed constructions in light of prior art (extrinsic evidence)? What principle of claim construction would that be based on? These are somewhat rhetorical questions. Care to comment?