About Bryan Wheelock

Education J.D., Washington University in St. Louis B.S.E. in Mechanical Engineering, Duke University Bryan Wheelock's practice includes preparation and prosecution of patent and trademark applications and drafting of intellectual property agreements, including non-compete agreements. He has brought and defended lawsuits in federal and state courts relating to intellectual property and has participated in seizures of counterfeit and infringing goods. Bryan prepares and prosecutes U.S. and foreign patent applications for medical devices, mechanical and electromechanical devices, manufacturing machinery and processes, metal alloys and other materials. He also does a substantial amount of patentability searching, trademark availability searching and patent and trademark infringement studies. In addition to his practice at Harness Dickey, Bryan is an Adjunct Professor at Washington University School of Law and Washington University School of Engineering.

August 20, 2014

Institution Decisions

In Google Inc. v. Arendi S.A.R.L., IPR2014-00450, Paper 10 (August 20, 2014), the Board instituted inter partes review of claims 1, 7, 10, 12, 16, and 20 of U.S. Patent No. 7,921,356, but not with respect to claims 2–6, 8, 9, 11, 13–15, and 17–19 (30% of the challenged claims).

In Google Inc. v. Arendi S.A.R.L., IP2014-00452, Paper 10 (August 20, 2014), the Board instituted inter partes review of claims 1–79 of U.S. Patent No. 6,323,853 (all of the challenged claims).

In Crocs, Inc. v. Polliwalks, Inc., IPR2014-00424, Paper 8 (August 20, 2014), the Board instituted inter partes reviwe of claims 1–19 of U.S. Patent No. 8,613,148 (100% of the challenged claims).

Dispositions

In LG Electronics Inc. v. NFC Technology, LLC, IPR2014-00959, Paper 12 (August 20, 2014), the Board terminated the inter partes review on the joint motion of the parties.

In LG Electronics Inc. v. NFC Technology, LLC, IPR2014-00964, Paper 10 (August 20, 2014), the Board terminated the inter partes review on the joint motion of the parties.

In Ossur Americas, Inc. v. Otto Bock Healthcare LP, IPR2014-00145, Paper 29 (August 20, 2014) the Board terminated the inter partes review on the joint motion of the parties.

In Groupon Inc. v. Maxim Integrated Products, Inc., CBM2014-00090, Paper 12 (August 20, 2014) the Board  terminated the covered business method review on the joint motion of the parties.

SCHOTT Gemtron Corporation v. SSW Holding Company, Inc., IPR2013-00358, Paper 106 (August 20, 2014) the Board found that claims 1, 13, and 25 of U.S. Patent No. 8,286,561 (all of the challenged claims) were unpatentable.

 Rehearing Decisions

In Eizo Corporation v. Barco N.V., IPR2014-00358, Paper 14 (August 20, 2014), the Board denied rehearing of its decision to institute inter partes review of claims 101–104 of U.S. Patent No. US RE43,707.

 

 

August 19, 2014

Institution Decisions

In Corning Optical Communications RF LLC v. PPC Broadband, Inc., IPR2014-00440, Paper 10 (August 19, 2014) the Board instituted inter partes review of  claims 1, 8, 9, 11, 18–26, and 29 of U.S. Patent No. 8,597,041 (all of the challenged claims).

In Corning Optical Communications RF LLC v. PPC Broadband, Inc., IPR2014-00441, Paper 10 (August 19, 2014) the Board instituted inter partes review of claims 31, 37, 39, 41, 42, 55, and 56 of U.S. Patent No. 8,562,366 (all of the challenged claims).

 

 

Board Holds Petitioners to Strict Compliance with the Rules

In Metrics, Inc.v. Senju Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., IPR2013-01041, Paper 8, and IPR2013-01043, Paper 8 (August 15, 2014), at patent owner’s promoting, the Board found fault with the petitioners first amended petition, and required a second amended petition.  The petitioenr was also required to refile a new set of exhibits, numbered beginning with Ex. 1001, and numbering each page of each exhibit.

August 15, 2014

New Filings

Zerto, Inc. filed IPR2014-01295 challenging U.S. Patent No. 7,971,091, assigned to EMC Corporation.

Rehearings

In CustomPlay, LLC v. Clearplay, Inc., IPR2014-00339, Paper 15 (August 15, 2014), the Board denied rehearing of its decision instituting inter partes review of claims 1, 2, and 4–9 of U.S. Patent No. 7,526,784.

 

Finding Evidence of Secondary Considerations

In Square, Inc. v. REM Holdings 3, LLC, IRP2014-00312, Paper 20 (Augist 14. 2014) the patent owner was seeking evidence of secondary considerations.  The Board denied additional discovery, but found that the patent owner made sufficient showing to entitle them to some information from Petitioner regarding sales figures.  A party seeking additional discovery must show more than a possibility or mere allegation that something useful will be found, but this does not meant that the requester must prove conclusively that they will win on the merits before any discovery will be granted.

The Board directed the parties to meet and confer on the issue of discovery and attempt to agree on a reasonable amount of information to produce. In the alternative, the Board said that petitioner may offer to stipulate to certain facts, such as sales figures, in order to avoid producing sensitive documents.  If the parties could not reach an agreement, the patent owner was authorized to renew the motion.

 

Beware the Death Squad

On August 14, 2014, Law360 quoted PTAB Chief Judge James Smith commenting that the Board’s reputation as a patent “death squad” – a phrase coined by former Federal Circuit Chief Judge Randall Rader.  While “death squad” is “unfortunate language,” in some ways it adequately describes the mission Congress gave the board under the AIA.  While the rate of declaration dropped from 87 percent in fiscal 2013, to 76 percent in fiscal 2014, the rate of filing continues ot increase.

 

August 14, 2014

New Filings

Merial Limited  filed IPR2014-01279 challenging U.S. Patent No. 8,501,799, assigned to VIRBAC.

Institution Decisions

In E Ink Corporation v. Research Frontiers Incorporated, IPR2014-00422, Paper 6 (August 14, 2014), the Board denied inter partes review of claims 1–12, 14–20, 22–27, and 29 of U.S. Patent No. 6,606,185.

Dispositions

In Coupa Software, Inc., v. Ariba, Inc., CBM2014-00061, Paper 16 (August 14, 2014) the Board terminated the proceeding on the joint motion of the parties.

Rehearing Decisions

In Netflix, Inc. v. OpenTV, Inc., IPR2014-00274, Paper 14 (August 14, 2104) the Board denied rehearing of its decision not to institute inter partes review of review of claims 1-20 of U.S. Patent No. 6,018,768.

 

The Inconsistency of Inconsistent Statements

In TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. v. Trading Technologies International, Inc., CBM2014-00131, Paper 11 (August 14, 2014), believing it caught Petitioner in a failure to disclose prior inconsistent statements, the Patent Owner sought “guidance” from the Board.  The Board merely reiterated the rule, directing the patent owner to 37 C.F.R. § 42.51(b)(1)(iii), which states “[u]nless previously served, a party must serve relevant information that is inconsistent with a position advanced by the party during the proceeding concurrent with the filing of the documents or things that contains the inconsistency.”

Routine discovery under 37 C.F.R. §41.51(b)(1)(iii) is narrowly directed to specific information known to the responding party to be inconsistent with a position advanced by that party in the proceeding, and not broadly directed to any subject area in general within which the requesting party hopes to discover such inconsistent information.”  Thus disclosure depends not only on the good faith of an opponent to make the disclosure, but to identify the inconsistency to begin with.

There is a duty to disclose inconsistent statements, but no real sytem to identify or enforce these disclosures.

In Search of Commercial Success

In Schott Gemtron Corporation v. SSW Holdings Company, Inc., IPR2014-00367, Paper 20 (August 13, 2014), the Board denied patent owner’s motion for additional discovery relating to commercial success.  The Board noted the legislative history of the AIA makes clear that additional discovery should be confined to “particular limited situations, such as minor discovery that PTO finds to be routinely useful, or to discovery that is justified by the special circumstances of the case,” and as the justification for being conservative in authorizing additional discovery.

The Board found the patent owner had not met its burden to demonstrate that discovery of the requested financial information is necessary in the interest of justice, failing to show that the sales level of Petitioner’s constituted commerical success, and a nexus between the claimed inventions and any commercial success of Petitioner’s products. While a conclusive showing of either is not necessary at this stage, some evidence is needed to establish that there is more than a mere possibility that Patent Owner’s request would uncover something useful.

About the nexus the Board said that a patent owner must offer “proof that the sales [of the product] were a direct result of the unique characteristics of the claimed invention—as opposed to other economic and commercial factors unrelated to the quality of the patented subject matter.” In re Huang, 100 F.3d 135, 140 (Fed. Cir. 1996). In addition, “if the commercial success is due to an unclaimed feature of the device,” or “if the feature that creates the commercial success was known in the prior art, the success is not pertinent.” Ormco, 463 F.3d at 1312; see also In re Kao, 639 F.3d 1057, 1070 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (requiring a determination of “whether the commercial success of the embodying product resulted from the merits of the claimed invention as opposed to the prior art or other extrinsic factors”).

 

 

 

SCHOTT Gemtron Corporation

SSW Holdings Company, Inc. of