Obtaining Additional Discovery in an Inter Partes Review Remains Difficult

The provision for “additional discovery” in inter partes review proceedings has consistently fallen victim to the PTAB’s steadfast resolve to ensure just, speedy, and inexpensive inter partes review proceedings.  With one notable exception, each request for additional discovery has been denied by the Board, typically with a holding that the movant has failed to meet the requirement that such discovery is “necessary in the interest of justice.”  37 CFR § 42.51(b)(2). Below, we summarize the most recent decisions relating to Motions for Additional Discovery and the key guidance from the Board that can be learned from each such decision.

Motions Denied

Smith & Nephew, Inc. v. Convatec Tech., Inc., IPR2013-00097, Paper 27 (August 21, 2013).  ConvaTec sought discovery into certain submissions made by Smith & Nephew to the FDA that related to a commercial product ConvaTec alleged was covered by its patent-at-issue.  Briefly, ConvaTec alleged that, during a UK proceeding, Smith & Nephew made confidential statements that suggested that it had failed to make the product by its own method and was forced to use methods claimed in ConvaTec’s patent.  This evidence would, per ConvaTec, be relevant secondary considerations of non-obviousness relating to copying and failure of others.  The Board denied the request, finding that ConvaTec failed to provide sufficient explanation and evidence that something useful would be uncovered if discovery were granted.  More specifically, the Board found that, even if the FDA had found that Smith & Nephew’s product was “substantially equivalent,” such a statement would be insufficient evidence of copying.  Order at 5.  Further, the “failure of others” argument was not deemed sufficient to allow discovery because, to establish that factor, there must be evidence of widespread efforts of skilled workers, having knowledge of the prior art, that failed to find a solution to the problem.  This single incident of failure, if proven, would not demonstrate such widespread efforts and failure.  Order at 7.

Blackberry Corp. v. Wi-Lan USA Inc., IPR2013-00126, Paper 15 (August 19, 2013).  Wi-Lan served a “First Request for Production of Documents and Things,” and Blackberry requested a conference call with the Board for guidance on whether it needed to respond to the requests.  In short, the Board said Blackberry need not respond to the requests.  The requests were based on the Routine Discovery provisions of the Patent Office regulations, but with some broadening caveats.  For example, Wi-Lan sought documents “relating to information inconsistent with…,” instead of “information inconsistent with…” as required by the Rules.  Even had the requests identically mirrored the Rules, however, the Board would still have ruled that they need not be responded to.  In short, Routine Discovery is self-executing and self-enforcing and, thus, there is no need for the service of discovery requests to get that information.  Order at 2.

St. Jude Medical, Cardiology Division, Inc. v. Board of Regents of the University of Michigan, IPR2013-00041, Paper 20 (July 31, 2013).  The University of Michigan sought documents St. Jude exchanged with the FDA in obtaining approval to market products covered by the patent-at-issue.  This information was sought for the purpose of seeing if it contained secondary considerations evidence, among other reasons.  St. Jude opposed given the magnitude of the burden on St. Jude to review and produce the documents.  Because Michigan only identified a “possibility” of finding useful information, the request for additional discovery was deemed insufficient by the Board.  Order at 3. University of Michigan was also deemed not to have acted timely in making the request (it having been made only shortly before the Patent Owner Response was due).

Illumina, Inc. v. The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York, IPR2012-00006, Paper 42 (May 7, 2013).   Columbia University sought to file a motion for additional discovery to use evidence obtained from Illumina in co-pending litigation.  The Board held that permission to use such evidence was unnecessary – simply, Columbia did not need to take any discovery at all, such discovery had already occurred.  The request for authorization to file the motion was denied, therefore, as moot.

Synopsis, Inc. v. Mentor Graphics Corp., IPR2012-00042, Paper 24 (April 25, 2013).  Mentor Graphics sought discovery relating to the issue of assignor estoppel.  Briefly, Mentor Graphics believed that additional discovery may have led to evidence proving that the petitioner was in privity with an assignor of the patent-at-issue.  For purposes of this motion, the Board assumed it could hear the issue of assignor estoppel, but ultimately denied the motion, in any event, because Mentor Graphics had not proven that the discovery was necessary in the interest of justice.  More specifically, Mentor Graphics: (1) failed to provide an explanation with evidence sufficient to show that something useful will be uncovered by the discovery: (2) failed to provide what efforts it had made to acquire, on its own, the discovery it now seeks; and (3) proffered discovery requests that were burdensome in terms of finances, human resources, and meeting the IPR time schedule.

Redline Detection, LLC v. Star Envirotech, Inc., IPR2013-00106, Paper 31 (August 27, 2013).  In an analogous case to the Mentor Graphics decision discussed above, Star Envirotech’s Motion for Additional Discovery, seeking information that would prove the applicability of an assignor estoppel defense, was denied because this three judge panel decided that assignor estoppel cannot be successfully raised as a defense in an inter partes review.  Thus, because assignor estoppel was not deemed to be a valid defense in inter partes review proceedings, Star Envirotech could not meet its burden to show that the requested discovery was necessary in the interest of justice.

The Exception

Corning Inc. v. DSM IP Assets B.V., IPR 2013-00043, Paper 27 (June 21, 2013).  Proving that it was not simply hitting the “NO Button” with regard to each Motion for Additional Discovery, the Board partially granted DSM’s request for Additional Discovery, allowing DSM discovery into laboratory notebooks and related documents that contained protocols and testing that underlie test results submitted by Corning’s expert.  In this IPR proceeding, Corning took the position that the subject matter in the challenged claims was unpatentable over the prior art based on inherent properties not explicitly recited in the prior art.  As such, Corning’s experts recreated the prior art compositions and tested them to prove that the properties from the DSM patent claims were inherent in those compositions.  DSM obtained the Board’s permission to discover the lab notebooks of Corning’s experts, but not actual samples of the compositions prepared by Corning, nor any testing results that were inconsistent with Corning’s testing (the latter discovery being deemed required already by “Routine Discovery”).

August 6, 2013 The Board Stays Reexamination Pending Completing of IPR

On August 6, 2013, the Board stayed Reexamination 90/012,669 on U.S. Patent No. 6,624,843, pending the completion of IPR2013-00432 on the same patent.  See Lumondi Inc. v. Lennon Image Technologies LLC, IPR2013-00432, Paper 7 (August 6, 2013).  Although the Board said that it will not ordinarily stay a reexamination because, in the absence of good cause, reexaminations are conducted with special dispatch, in fact the Board has routinely stayed rexamiantions in favor of IPRs where the same claims are at issue.

On July 8, 2013, Six New IPRs Filed

Toyota Motor Corporation filed six new IPR’s: IPR2013-00412 and IPR2013-00413 on U.S. Patent No. 6738697 on Telematics system for vehicle diagnostics; IPR2013-00414 on U.S. Patent No. 7630802 on Information management and monitoring system and method; IPR2013-00415 on U.S. Patent No. 7650210 on Remote vehicle diagnostic management; IPR2013-00416 on U.S. Patent No. 8019501 on Vehicle diagnostic and prognostic methods and systems; and IPR2013-00417 on U.S. Patent No. 8036788 on Vehicle diagnostic or prognostic message transmission systems and methods.

On July 5, 2013, Three new IPRs were Filed

On July 5, 2013, Apotex Corp.filed IPR2013-00428 on U.S. Patent No. 8268299 on Self Preserved Aqueous Pharmaceutical Compositions; IPR2013-00429 on U.S. Patent No. 8323630 on Self Preserved Aqueous Pharmaceutical Compositions; and IPR2013-00430 on U.S. Patent No. 8388941 on Self Preserved Aqueous Pharmaceutical Compositions.

On July 3, 2013, Three New IPR were Filed, Including One a Against a Reissued Patent; Board Deals with Idle Free Fallout; and the Board Clarifies that all Agreements Must be Disclosed to Terminate an IPR

On July 3, 2013, Moore Rod & Pipe, LLC filed IPR2013-00418 against U.S. Patent No. RE36362 on Polymer Liners in Rod Pumping Wells; Sony Corporation filed IPR2013-00326 against U.S. Patent No. 6,665,003 on System and Method for Generating and Displaying Panoramic Images and Movies, and IPR2013-00327 against U.S. Patent No. 7,477,284 on System and Method for Capturing and Viewing Stereoscopic Panoramic Images.

In Nichia Corp. v. Emcore Corp., IPR2012-00005 (JYC), Paper 30 (July 3, 2013), the Board denied Emcore’s motion to file a second motion to amend in view of Idle Free Systems, Inc. v. Bergstrom, Inc., IPR2012-00027, Paper 26 (PTAB, Jun. 11, 2013).  The Board indicated that Emcore was free to argue that the Idle Free Systems decision should not be applied literally to its motion to amend, as it did not have the benefit of the guidance set forth in that decision before filing its motion to amend.

In Hyundai Motor America, Inc., v. Clear with Computers, LLC, IPR2013-00104, Paper 16, and IPR2013-00176, Paper 17 (July 23, 2013), before terminating the two IPRs broughat against U.S. Patent No. 8,121,904 the Board required the parties to certify in writing that there are no other written or oral agreements or understandings,including any collateral agreements, between them, including but not limited to, licenses, covenants not sue, confidentiality agreements, or other agreements of any kind, that are made in connection with, or in contemplation of, the termination of the IPR Proceedings.  The Board also required the Patent Owner to indicate whether there were any other pending infringement suits involving the patent.  In contrast the same day, the Board granted a motion to terminate in CBS Interactive, Inc. v. Helfrich Patent Licensing, LLC, IPR2013-00033 (JYC), Paper 60 (July 3, 2013), where the parties submitted their settlement agreement, and moved pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 42.74(c), that the settlement agreement be treated as business confidential information and be kept separate from the files of the patent.

On July 2, 2013, One New IPR Filed; Board Approves Non-Electronic Filing of Exhibit

On July 2, 2013,  General Growth Properties, Inc., filed IPR2013-00400 on U.S. Patent No. 6,397,143 on Layout Based Method for Map Navigation.

In McClinton Energy Group, LLC v. Magnum Oil Tools International, Ltd., IPR2013-00231 (SCM), Paper 13, (July 2, 2013) The Board allowed Petitioner to submit a video that it was unable to upload using the electronic system.

On July 1, 2013, Nine New IPRs were filed.

Apple Inc . filed IPR2013-00393 and IPR2013-00394 on U.S. Patent No. 7,418,504 on Agile Network Protocol for Secure Communications Using Secure Domain Names; Apple Inc  filed IPR2013-00397 and IPR2013-00398 on U.S. Patent No. 7,921,211 on Agile Network Protocol for Secure Communications Using Secure Domain Names; Federal Reserve Bank of Boston filed IPR2013-00406 on U.S. Patent No. 5,936,541, on Method for Securing Information Relevant to a Transaction and IPR2013-00409 on U.S. Patent No. 5,793,302 on Method for Securing Information Relevant to a Transaction; Permobil, Inc., filed IPR2013-00407 on U.S. Patent No. 8,408,598 on Anti-tip System for a Power Wheelchair, and filed IPR2013-00411 on U.S. Patent No. 8,408,343; Hitachi Cable America Inc., filed IPR2013-00408 on U.S. Patent No. 5,563,377 Telecommunications Cable.

June 23, 2013, Four New IPR’s Filed

On June 23, 2013, New Bay Capital, LLC filed IPR 2013-00375 on U.S. Patent No. 6,502,135, on Agile Network Protocol for Secure Communications with Assured System Availability; IPR 2013-00376 on U.S. Patent No. 7,490,151 on Establishment of a Secure Communication Link Based on a Domain Name Service (DNS) Request; IPR 2013-00377 on U.S. Patent No. 7,418,504 on Agile Network Protocol for Secure Communications using Secure Domain Names; and IPR 2013-000378 on U.S. Patent No. 7,921,211 on Agile Network Protocol for Secure Communications using Secure Domain Names.

June 21, 2013, Four New IPRs Filed

On June 21, 2013 Aisin Seiki Co., Ltd. filed IPR2013-00380 on U.S. Patent No. 7,413,048 on Weight Measuring Systems and Methods for Vehicles; IPR2013-00382  on U.S. Patent No. 7,976,060 on Seat Load or Displacement Measuring System for Occupant Restraint System Control; and IPR2013-00383 on U.S. Patent No. 8,235,416 on Arrangement for Sensing Weight of an Occupying Item in a Vehicular Seat.  Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company filed IPR2013-00381 on U.S. Patent No. 7,485,968 on 3D IC Method and Device.