SignalQuest, Inc. v. Chou et al
Filing
75
MEMORANDUM ORDER: For the reasons stated, the court adopts the constructions of the disputed claim terms as outlined. So Ordered by Chief Judge Joseph N. Laplante.(jb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
SignalQuest, Inc.
v.
Civil No. 11-cv-392-JL
Opinion No. 2015 DNH 020
Ten-Ming Chou,
OncQue Corporation,
and Bravotronics Corporation
MEMORANDUM ORDER
This is a dispute over the construction of the claims of a
patent for a vibration switch, United States Patent No. 6,706,979
(filed Mar. 16, 2014).
The plaintiff, SignalQuest, Inc.,
commenced this action by way of a complaint for a declaratory
judgment that its products do not infringe the ‘979 patent, owned
(at that point) by defendant Ten-Ming Chou.
Chou, who is also
the patent’s named inventor, responded with a counterclaim
alleging that certain SignalQuest products, including its
“SQ-SEN-200 model number vibration switch,” in fact infringe the
‘979 patent.1
SignalQuest subsequently amended its complaint to
bring claims of patent infringement against defendant OncQue
Corporation (of which Chou is allegedly the chief executive
officer) and Chou, asserting that its products infringe patents
for an omnidirectional tilt and vibration sensor, which are owned
1
Bravotronics Corporation, to which Chou has since assigned
his interest in the ‘979 patent, was subsequently added as a
defendant and counterclaimant by way of the parties’ joint
motion. Order of Jan. 10, 2014.
by SignalQuest.2
This court has subject-matter jurisdiction
under 28 U.S.C. § 1338(a) (patents).
The parties differ over the meaning of a number of terms as
they appear in the only independent claim of the ‘979 patent,
claim 1, as well as certain of its dependent claims.
The court
received briefing and conducted a hearing on this issue in
accordance with Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc., 517 U.S.
370, 388 (1996), though the parties used the hearing solely to
present oral argument.
Based on those presentations, the court
arrives at the interpretations of the disputed claim terms
specifically set forth below.
I.
Applicable legal standard
The meaning of language in a patent claim presents a
question of law for the court to decide.
388.
Markman, 517 U.S. at
“[T]he words of a claim are generally given their ordinary
2
These patents, United States Patent Nos. 7,067,748 (filed
June 27, 2006), 7,326,866 (filed Feb. 5, 2008), and 7,326,867
(filed Feb. 5, 2008), were the subject of reexamination
proceedings before the United States Patent and Trademark Office
filed after the commencement of this action. Based on the
pendency of those proceedings, the court had stayed litigation of
SignalQuest’s patent infringement claims here, but decided that
litigation of its claim for a declaration of non-infringement,
and Bravotronics’s corresponding infringement claim, should
proceed. Order of Apr. 29, 2014. Accordingly, this order
addresses the construction of the ‘979 patent only, with
construction of the other patents--which survived reexamination-to await a later stage in the case, if necessary.
2
and customary meaning,” i.e., “the meaning that the term would
have to a person of ordinary skill in the art in question at the
time of the invention.”
Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303,
1212-13 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc) (quotation marks omitted).
In
arriving at this meaning,
a claim construction analysis must begin and remain
centered on the claim language itself, for that is the
language the patentee has chosen to particularly point
out and distinctly claim the subject matter which the
patentee regards his invention. The claims, of course,
do not stand alone. Rather, they are part of a fully
integrated written instrument, consisting principally
of a specification that concludes with the claims. For
that reason, claims must be read in light of the
specification, of which they are a part.
Source Vagabond Sys. Ltd. v. Hydrapak, Inc., 753 F.3d 1291, 1299
(Fed. Cir. 2012) (citations, quotation marks, and bracketing by
the court omitted).
Yet “[w]hen consulting the specification to clarify the
meaning of claim terms, courts must take care not to import
limitations into the claims from the specification.”
Abbott
Labs. v. Sandoz, 566 F.3d 1282, 1288 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (en banc).
“It is therefore important not to confuse exemplars or preferred
embodiments in the specification that serve to teach and enable
the invention with limitations that define the outer boundaries
3
of claim scope.”
Intervet Inc. v. Merial Ltd., 617 F.3d 1282,
1287 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (citing Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1323).3
II.
Background
The ‘979 patent teaches “a vibration switch which can be
instantly disposed in a switch-off state when jerked by a force
coming from any direction.”
The invention consists of “two
electrically conductive rollable bodies which abut against two
tangential areas of two electric contact bodies to establish
electric contact between the electric contact bodies, and which
will lurch toward a farthermost area of a respective one of the
electric contact bodies when the vibration switch is in an
unsteady state so as to break the electric contact.”
The patent consists of one independent claim, to wit:
A vibration switch adapted to be in electric contact
with a support, comprising:
a housing adapted to be mounted on the support in an
upright direction, and including an upper wall and a
lower wall spaced apart from each other in the upright
direction to confine an accommodation chamber;
first and second electric contact bodies which are
disposed in said accommodation chamber, and which
3
“In addition to consulting the specification, . . . a court
should also consider the patent’s prosecution history, if it is
in evidence.” Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1317. Here, the parties
have not submitted any prosecution history of the ‘979 patent,
which was allowed as originally filed. Nor, aside from a few
references to a general purpose dictionary, have the parties
submitted any extrinsic evidence, e.g., “expert and inventor
testimony, dictionaries, [or] learned treaties.” Id. at 1317.
4
respectively have first and second rolling surfaces
that are spaced apart from each other along a
centerline oriented in one of the upright direction and
a longitudinal direction that is transverse to the
upright direction, said first and second rolling
surfaces respectively defining first and second
farthermost areas which are spaced apart from each
other by a first length along a centerline, and
respectively defining first and second tangential areas
being spaced apart from each other by a distance that,
when projected on a longitudinal line in the
longitudinal direction, is equivalent to a second
length; and
first and second electrically conductive rollable
bodies which are rollable on said first and second
rolling surfaces about first and second rolling axesm
respectively, and which respectively have first and
second perimetrical areas that are in contact with the
first and second rolling surfaces, respectively, and
first and second widths, each of said first and second
widths being defined by a distances that is between two
diametrically opposite points in a respective one of
said first and second perimetrical areas, sum of the
first width and the second width being smaller than the
first length and larger than the second length, such
that when the support on which said housing is mounted
stands still, said first and second electrically
conductive rollable bodies are tangent to each other,
and respectively abut against said first and second
tangential areas by virtue of gravity to thereby
establish electric contact between said first and
second electrical contact bodies, and such that once
the support is caused to quiver in an unsteady state,
said first and second electrically conductive rollable
bodies will be caused to lurch towards one of said
first and second farthermost areas so that one of said
first and second electrically conductive rollable
bodies is out of contact with a corresponding one of
said first and second rolling surfaces which defines
the other one of said first and second farthermost
areas, thereby breaking the electric contact between
said first and second electric contact bodies.
5
III. Analysis
As noted at the outset, the parties differ over the meaning
of a number of terms as they appear in claim 1 (and, in some
cases, of certain dependent claims) of the ‘979 patent.
The
court resolves those disputes as follows.
A.
Independent claim 14
1.
“adapted to be mounted”
The patent claims “[a] vibration switch adapted to be in
electric contact with a support, comprising,” among other
elements, “a housing adapted to be mounted on the support in an
upright direction.”
SignalQuest argues that this means “an
integrally formed extension of the housing itself mounts on the
support,” i.e., “[t]here is no separate and removable item
connecting the housing to the support.”
But the defendants
disagree, arguing that “adapted to be mounted” means simply
“capable of mounting.”
The court agrees with the defendants.
Claim 1’s teaching that the “housing [is] adapted to be
mounted on the support” does not, as SignalQuest argues,
necessarily “mean[] that there is a physical limitation to the
housing itself”--as opposed to a structure that is added to but
4
Insofar as any of the terms construed in this section also
appear in dependent claims, the same construction applies.
6
remains separable from the housing--to accomplish the mounting.
There is nothing inherent in the phrase “adapted to” that
requires an alteration of, rather than an addition to, that which
existed prior to the adaptation.
As the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has
observed, “[i]n common parlance, the phrase ‘adapted to’ is
frequently used to mean ‘made to,’ ‘designed to,’ or ‘configured
to,’ but it can also be used to mean ‘capable of’ or ‘suitable
for.’”
Aspex Eyewear, Inc. v. Marchon Eyewear, Inc., 672 F.3d
1335, 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (citing Sta-Rite Indus., LLC v. ITT
Corp., 682 F. Supp. 2d 738, 753 (E.D. Tex. 2010)); Boston
Scientific Corp. v. Cordis Corp., No. 02-1474, 2006 WL 3782840,
at *2 (N.D. Cal. 2006)).
While SignalQuest cites these cases,
they do not support its construction of “adapted to” to exclude
“a separate and removable item.”
As one of the cases observes,
the terms “configured to” or “designed to” simply “embrace[] the
concept of a device intentionally and specifically made to act in
a certain way.”
Boston Scientific, 2006 WL 3782840, at *2.
That
definition readily fits a “housing adapted to be mounted” by
inserting an element into the housing to allow for mounting.
SignalQuest does not argue to the contrary.5
5
Instead, SignalQuest argues that these cases have
“universally rejected” the defendants’ proposed construction of
“adapted to” as “capable of.” That is not so, as the Federal
7
SignalQuest also points to the section of the specification
that describes the first preferred embodiment of the invention,
in which “[t]he housing is made from an electrically conductive
material, and is adapted to be mounted on a support.”
In
particular, this section of the specification teaches, a “first
electric terminal is integrally formed with the left end portion
of the housing, and has a connected end connected to the first
electric contact body, and a terminal end extending from the
Circuit’s Aspex Eyewear opinion demonstrates (in the foregoing
quotation as well as elsewhere). 672 F.3d at 1349 (observing
that “‘adapted to’” is sometimes used in claim drafting to carry
the broader meaning,” i.e., “‘suitable for’ rather than ‘made
to’”). It is true that, in Aspex Eyewear and the other cases on
which SignalQuest relies, the courts ultimately construed
“adapted to” to mean “designed to” or “configured to,” rather
than “capable of” or “suitable for,” but even the narrower
reading does not support SignalQuest’s proffered construction
here, as just explained in the main text. For the moment, then,
it is sufficient to reject SignalQuest’s proffered construction,
without deciding whether to adopt the defendants’ proposed
construction, of “adapted to.” (Indeed, the defendants point out
that the case law construes the term as “‘configured to’ or
‘capable of’” without saying which definition should control
here.) If further developments in the case (such as summary
judgment practice or trial) require this court to choose whether
“adapted to” means “designed to” or simply “capable of,” the
court will make that decision at the appropriate time. See Vivid
Techs., Inc. v. Am. Science & Eng’g, Inc., 200 F.3d 795, 803
(Fed. Cir. 1999) (“only those terms need be construed that are in
controversy, and only to the extent necessary to resolve [the
controversy]”).
8
connected end outwardly and downwardly of the left end portion to
be in electric contact with the support.”6
As an initial matter, this argument appears to “confuse
exemplars or preferred embodiments in the specification that
serve to teach and enable the invention with limitations that
define the outer boundaries of claim scope,” which is
impermissible.
Intervet, 617 F.3d at 1287.
In any event, the
specification also discloses third and fourth preferred
embodiments in which the first electric contact body is
“separable from the housing.
An additional insulating plug is
provided to be fitted into the opening end of the housing to
serve as the left end portion” (emphasis added).
In these
embodiments, the terminal is connected to the contact body
“through a through hole in the insulating plug,” with “a terminal
end that extends . . . outwardly of the insulating plug and bent
downwardly of the housing to be in electric contact with the
support.”
Importantly, this terminal is not “an integrally
formed extension of the housing itself,” since it extends from
the electric contact body (which, again, is “separable from the
housing”) through an insulating plug which is itself “fitted into
6
The second preferred embodiment also discloses “a first
electric terminal [that] is integrally formed with the housing,
and has a terminal end which extends outwardly and downwardly of
the lower wall.”
9
the opening end of” (and therefore, like the contact body, not
“integrally formed of”) the housing.
The specification, then, explicitly discloses preferred
embodiments in which the housing connects to the support by way
of a terminal extending from a “separable” contact body--as
opposed to the “integrally formed” terminal disclosed in the
embodiments on which SignalQuest relies.
So construing the claim
to exclude any “separate and removable item connecting the
housing to the support,” as SignalQuest urges, would exclude two
of the preferred embodiments disclosed in the patent--as
SignalQuest acknowledges.
And “[a] claim construction that
excludes [a] preferred embodiment ‘is rarely, if ever correct.’”
Adams Respiratory Therapeutics, Inc. v. Perrigo Co., 616 F.3d
1283, 1290 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (quoting Vitronics Corp. v.
Conceptronic Inc., 90 F.3d 1576, 1583-84 (Fed. Cir. 1996)).
Of course, “rarely” does not mean “never,” and, at the
hearing, SignalQuest pointed to a few cases where the Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit has construed a patent to exclude
one of its preferred embodiments.
See August Tech. Corp. v.
Camtek, Ltd., 655 F.3d 1278, 1285 (Fed. Cir. 2011); Rolls-Royce,
PLC v. United Techs. Corp., 603 F.3d 1325, 1334-35 (Fed. Cir.
2010); TIP Sys., LLC v. Phillips & Brooks/Gladwin, Inc., 529 F.3d
1364, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
In these cases, however, “to
10
construe the term to encompass [an] alternative embodiment would
contradict the language of the claims,” TIP Sys., 529 F.3d at
1373; see also August Tech., 655 F.3d at 1284-85 (rejecting a
construction which, while necessary to encompass one of the
disclosed embodiments, “renders [the] difference between the
singular and the plural terms [in the claim] superfluous”), or
otherwise lead to an “unreasonable” result, Rolls-Royce, 603 F.3d
at 1335 (rejecting such a construction as “because the single
claimed direction ‘forward’ would then encompass two directions
at right angles to each other”).7
Here, no such problems arise
from construing the phrase “a housing adapted to be mounted on
the support,” as it appears in claim 1, to include a housing that
connects to the support by way of the terminal running through
the insulating plug to the separable contact body, as disclosed
by the third and fourth preferred embodiments.
Finally, SignalQuest’s proposed construction of the phrase
“adapted to be mounted” in claim 1 would also read a limitation
into it which is expressly spelled out in one of its dependent
claims.
Specifically, claim 7 discloses (by reference to other
7
To similar effect, when faced with “multiple embodiments”
(as is the case here), the Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit has “interpreted claims to exclude embodiments where
those embodiments are inconsistent with unambiguous language”
elsewhere in the patent (which, as just discussed, is not the
case here). Sinorgchem Co., Shangdong v. ITC, 511 F.3d 1132,
1138 (Fed. Cir. 2007).
11
claims) the same vibration switch as claim 1, except that (in
addition to other limitations) “said housing is made from an
electrically conductive material and said first electric contact
body and said first electric terminal are integrally formed with
said housing” (emphasis added).
As the defendants point out,
“the doctrine of claim differentiation disfavors reading a
limitation from a dependent claim into an independent claim” in
this manner.
Virnetx, Inc. v. Cisco Sys., Inc., 767 F.3d 1308,
1316 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
The doctrine proceeds from the
presumption of “a difference in meaning and scope when different
words and phrases are used in separate claims.
To the extent
that the absence of such difference in meaning would make a claim
superfluous, the doctrine of claim differentiation states the
presumption that the difference between claims is significant.”
Andersen Corp. v. Fiber Composites, LLC, 474 F.3d 1361, 1369
(Fed. Cir. 2007) (quotation marks omitted).
SignalQuest argues that “the doctrine is not implicated
because the challenged limitation . . . is not the only
meaningful difference between the two claims.”
In particular,
SignalQuest asserts, claim 7 includes an additional limitation,
beyond the “integrally formed” terminal and housing, i.e., that
the housing be “electrically conductive.”
As discussed in more
detail below, however, SignalQuest also proposes to read that
12
very same limitation into claim 1.
See infra Part II.A.2.
Implementing these two aspects of SignalQuest’s proposed
construction--that the terminal and housing be “integrally
formed” and the housing be “electrically conductive”--would
indeed give claim 1 the same scope as claim 7, one of its
dependent claims.
In other words, to use SignalQuest’s language,
adopting its “challenged limitations” (plural) would eliminate
“the only meaningful differences” (plural) that it has identified
between claims 1 and 7.8
That is at odds with the doctrine of
claim differentiation, as just discussed.
SignalQuest also argues that the doctrine of claim
differentiation is not “a hard and fast rule.”
That is correct:
as already noted, the doctrine simply creates a presumption
against arriving at the same construction for differently worded
claims.
See, e.g., Andersen Corp., 474 F.3d at 1369.
Here,
though, SignalQuest has not identified anything to overcome the
presumption that the limitations of claim 7, requiring an
“integrally formed” terminal and housing, and an “electrically
conductive housing,” should not be read into claim 1.
As already
discussed, a terminal that is “integrally formed” of the housing
8
While this problem would be avoided if the court adopted
SignalQuest’s construction of just one of these terms,
SignalQuest has not requested that relief and, in any event, the
court declines to adopt SignalQuest’s proffered interpretation of
either of these terms. See infra Part II.A.2.
13
does not necessarily follow from claim 1’s teaching that the
housing is “adapted to be mounted on the support,” and two of the
four preferred embodiments in the specification disclose switches
where the terminal connects to the support yet is “separable”
from the housing.
Accordingly, the court rejects SignalQuest’s
proffered construction of claim 1 to require that “an integrally
formed extension of the housing itself,” rather than any
“separate or removable item,” mounts on the support.
2.
“housing”
While both SignalQuest and the defendants agree that the
term “housing,” as it appears in claim 1, means “enclosure,” they
disagree on whether the enclosure must also be “electrically
conductive.”
SignalQuest insists that it must, relying
principally on the fact that--in teaching the first preferred
embodiment of the invention--the specification describes the
housing as “made from an electrically conductive material.”
Again, however, the court must guard against reading limitations
from the specification’s teaching of a preferred embodiment into
the claims themselves.
See Abbott Labs., 566 F.3d at 1288.
But neither must the court ignore the specification in
construing the claims, see id., and, seizing on this principle,
SignalQuest argues that the patent “provides no alternative to
the conductive housing called for in the specification,” because
14
it nowhere “reference[s] a housing that is not electrically
conductive.”
Of course, the patent--like any patent necessarily
bound by limitations of time and space in its drafting--“fails”
to specify many characteristics that the invention, or its
elements, does not have, so this argument does not go very far.
To the contrary, courts usually may not
add a narrowing modifier before an otherwise general
term that stands unmodified in a claim. For example,
if an apparatus claim recites a general structure
(e.g., a noun) without limiting that structure to a
specific subset of structures (e.g., with an
adjective), [courts] will generally construe the claim
to cover all types of that structure that are supported
by the patent disclosure.
Renishaw PLC v. Marposs Societa’ per Azioni, 158 F.3d 1243, 124950 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (citations omitted).
In any event, the specification in fact discloses preferred
embodiments (namely, the third and fourth) in which the electric
contact bodies, which are “separable” from the housing, have
terminals that extend through insulating plugs before bending
“downwardly of the housing to be in electric contact with the
support.”
As the defendants explain, this configuration allows
current to flow through the contact bodies (and, when the switch
is in the “on” position, the electrically conductive rollable
bodies) and terminals to the support and, as such, eliminates any
need for the body of the housing to be electrically conductive.
15
SignalQuest does not dispute this point, which serves to
show that, in fact, the specification discloses embodiments in
which the housing need not itself be electrically conductive.
SignalQuest has provided no basis, then, for reading into claim 1
the requirement that the housing be “electrically conductive.”
In addition, as already discussed, claim 7 specifically describes
a switch “wherein said housing is made of electrically conductive
material,” so adopting SignalQuest’s proffered construction of
“housing” (at least while also adopting its proffered
construction of “adapted to be mounted”) in claim 1 would result
in an independent claim with the same scope as one of its
dependent claims--a disfavored result.
See Part II.A.1, supra.
Accordingly, this court rejects SignalQuest’s proffered
construction of the term “housing” in claim 1 to require an
“electrically conductive enclosure,” and reads it simply to
require an “enclosure.”
3.
“accommodation chamber”
The parties also dispute the proper construction of claim
1’s teaching that the housing “includ[es] an upper wall and a
lower wall spaced apart from each other in the upright direction
to confine an accommodation chamber.”
SignalQuest argues that
the accommodation chamber must be “confined by an upper wall and
a lower wall spaced apart from each other in the upright
16
direction, a left end portion, and a right end portion.”
The
defendants argue that the “accommodation chamber” is merely “a
space with walls,” eliminating any need for the “left end
portion” and the “right end portion” urged by SignalQuest.9
As support for their reading, the defendants rely on the
language of claim 1, which, as just quoted, discloses “an upper
wall and a lower wall spaced apart from each other in the upright
direction” as the elements that “confine an accommodation
chamber”--without mentioning any right end or left end portion.
This argument, however, ignores the import of the term “chamber”
itself, which is not ordinarily used to describe a space confined
by only two walls (or at least two walls that are “spaced apart
from each other” so that they do not intersect).
To the
contrary, “[t]he plain and ordinary meaning of chamber is an
enclosed space or cavity.”
Agilent Techs., Inc. v. Affymetrix,
Inc., No. 06-5958, 2008 WL 7348188, at *6 (N.D. Cal. June 13,
2008) (quotation marks omitted).
A space between only two walls
is not “enclosed,” nor, for that matter, is it “confined.”
9
While the defendants further assert that the accommodation
chamber “need not be vertical at any instance,” SignalQuest does
not respond to this assertion in its claim construction briefing.
Given the apparent absence of a dispute over this alleged
requirement, the court need not address it at this time. See
n. 5, supra.
17
Based on the plain and ordinary meaning of the word
“chamber,” then, the court rejects the defendants’ proffered
construction of the term “accommodation chamber” as simply “a
space with walls.”
Instead, the court adopts SignalQuest’s
proposal that the term means “a chamber confined by an upper wall
and a lower wall spaced apart from each other in the upright
direction, a left end portion, and a right end portion.”
This reading gains additional support from the
specification, which, in discussing the first preferred
embodiment, teaches that “[t]he housing has an upper wall and a
lower wall spaced apart from each other in the upright direction,
a left end portion which is integrally formed with the upper and
lower walls, and a right end portion which is configured as an
insulating plug that is fitted into an opening end cooperatively
defined by the upper and lower walls, thereby confining an
accommodation chamber” (emphasis added).
This sentence clearly
identifies the upper and lower wall, the left end portion, and
the right end portion as the elements that “confine” the
accommodation chamber--as any “chamber” must be confined.
Furthermore, the other preferred embodiments disclosed in
the specification do not teach any configuration of the
accommodation chamber that excludes end portions.
The third
preferred embodiment, in fact, features an “insulating plug
18
[that] is provided to be fitted into an opening end of the
housing to serve as the left end portion” (emphasis added).
Because the plain and ordinary meaning of the term “accommodation
chamber” as it appears in claim 1 requires end portions as well
as upper and lower walls, and the specification only reinforces
that meaning, the court adopts SignalQuest’s proffered
construction of “accommodation chamber” as “a chamber confined by
an upper and lower wall spaced apart from each other in the
upright direction, a left end portion, and a right end
portion.”10
4.
“disposed in said accommodation chamber”
Claim 1 teaches that, in addition to the housing, the
vibration switch is comprised of “first and second electric
contact bodies which are disposed in said accommodation chamber.”
SignalQuest argues that this phrase requires the electric contact
bodies to be “entirely located within the accommodation chamber,”
10
Relying on the third preferred embodiment, the defendants
argue that the left end portion need not be “integrally formed
with the upper and lower walls” as taught in the first preferred
embodiment. While SignalQuest originally argued that the term
“accommodation chamber” required the left end portion to be
integrally formed with the upper and lower walls, it retreated
from that position in its responsive claim construction brief.
Given this development, the court need not decide whether the
term “accommodation chamber” requires the end portions to be
integrally formed with the upper and lower walls--only whether,
as SignalQuest now argues, the end portions are required.
19
while the defendants argue that the bodies need only be “at least
partly inside the accommodation chamber.”
The defendants have
the better argument.
As an initial matter, the plain and ordinary meaning of the
phrase “disposed in” does not require its subject to be “entirely
located”--or, it might be said, “subsumed”--within its object.
The plain and ordinary meaning of “disposed in” is simply “placed
in.”
Indeed, elsewhere in the patent, the term “disposed in” is
used in this sense:
the “summary of the invention” section of
the patent teaches that the “switch is adapted to be disposed in
electric contact with a support.”
There is, of course, a
“general requirement that claim terms be construed consistently
throughout a patent.”
Joovy LLC v. Target Corp., 437 Fed. Appx.
932, 937 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (citing Rexnord Corp. v. Laitram Corp.,
274 F.3d 1336, 1342 (Fed. Cir. 2001)).
SignalQuest argues that, regardless, “[n]owhere in the
specification or figures is the concept of the electric contact
bodies being partly located within the accommodation offered or
suggested.”
Again, though, it is the claims, not the
specification and its illustrations, that define the scope of the
invention.
Intervet, 617 F.3d at 1287.
In any event, the
specification discloses, as the first preferred embodiment, a
configuration in which “[t]he first electric contact body is
20
integrally formed with the left end portion, and is disposed in
the accommodation chamber.”
In this configuration, as the
defendants point out, the outer faces of the contact body also
constitute the outer faces of the left end portion, so that the
contact body is not “entirely located within the accommodation
chamber” (instead, its outer faces form the outer portion of the
chamber and are therefore outside of it).
Because neither the
plain and ordinary meaning of the claim language itself, nor the
specification, supports SignalQuest’s proffered reading of the
term “disposed in” as “entirely located within,” the court
rejects that construction, and adopts the defendants’ proffered
reading of the term, i.e., “at least partly inside.”
5.
“rolling surfaces”/“tangential areas”
Claim 1 further teaches that the aforementioned first and
second electric contact bodies
respectively have first and second rolling surfaces
that are spaced apart from each other along a
centerline oriented in one of the upright direction and
a longitudinal direction that is transverse to the
upright direction, said first and second rolling
surfaces respectively defining first and second
farthermost areas which are spaced apart from each
other by a first length along a centerline, and
respectively defining first and second tangential areas
being spaced apart from each other by a distance that,
when projected as a longitudinal line in the
longitudinal direction, is equivalent to a second
length.
21
The parties dispute the meanings of a number of terms from this
description of the contact bodies.
In essence, SignalQuest reads
the description to exclude the “tangential areas” from the
“rolling surfaces” such that “[t]he first and second rolling
surfaces define outer perimeters that border the first and second
tangential areas respectively.”11
The defendants, however, argue
that the “tangential areas” are in fact part of the “rolling
surfaces,” i.e., the “areas of [the] rolling surfaces contacted
by the rolling bodies when [the] rolling bodies touch.”
The text and structure of the claim language support the
defendants’ proffered construction.
As an initial matter,
“tangential” is commonly and ordinarily used to refer to a
spatial relationship in which forms touch at their peripheries,
or outer edges.
To describe an “area” as tangential to a
“surface,” then, indicates that the surface and the area share
some space in common and, as a consequence, are not entirely
distinct.
Indeed, claim 1 states that the first and second
rolling surfaces “respectively defin[e] first and second
11
SignalQuest further asserts that the tangential area of
each electric contact body “does not meet or cross the
centerline.” In their reply brief, the defendants agree,
describing the tangential areas as “basically upright rings which
extend around the centerline in a plane transverse to the
centerline. Therefore, of course, they never cross the
centerline.” This aspect of SignalQuest’s proffered
construction, then, is not in dispute, so the court need not rule
on it. See n. 5, supra.
22
tangential areas.”
One would not normally speak of a surface
“defining” an area yet remaining entirely distinct from it.
While, as SignalQuest points out, “defining a border of a thing
. . . defines the limits of that thing,” it does not follow that
what defines the border remains separate from the area defined.
In any event, claim 1 does not say that the rolling surfaces
“define the borders”--or, to quote from SignalQuest’s proffered
construction, “define outer perimeters”--of the tangential areas,
but simply that the surfaces “defin[e]” the areas themselves.
“[A]n analysis that adds words to the claim language without
support in the intrinsic evidence . . . does not follow the
standard canons of claim construction.”
Source Vagabond Sys.
Ltd. v. Hydrapak, Ltd., 753 F.3d 1291, 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2014)
(quotation marks and bracketing by the court omitted).
SignalQuest argues that the intrinsic evidence, namely, the
illustrations, in fact supports reading “rolling surfaces” to
exclude the tangential areas.
It is true that, in several of the
cross-sectional figures, the “tangential area” is labeled as a
segment of the contact body shown at a right angle to the
semicircular curve labeled as the “rolling surface.”
But it is
far from clear from the cross-sectional drawings whether the
labeling of each respective rolling surface and tangential area
excludes the point at which they touch--which, in a three-
23
dimensional rendering, would form an entire ring that is
unaccounted for in SiganlQuest’s attempt to divide the contact
body into a rolling surface and a tangential area.
The
configuration in the drawings, moreover, is nowhere described in
the text of the patent, either in the specification or, more
importantly, the language of claim 1 itself (which, again, states
simply that the rolling surfaces “define” the tangential areas).
And “the mere fact that the patent drawings depict a particular
embodiment of the patent does not operate to limit the claims to
that specific configuration.”
Anchor Wall Sys., Inc. v. Rockwood
Retaining Walls, Inc., 340 F.3d 1298, 1306-07 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
SignalQuest also relies on claim 1’s teaching that, “when
the support on which [the] housing is mounted stands still, [the]
first and second electrically conductive rollable bodies . . .
respectively abut against [the] first and second tangential areas
by virtue of gravity.”
Because “‘[a]but against’ is not the same
as ‘roll on,’” SignalQuest argues, it follows that the rolling
surfaces exclude the tangential areas.
As the defendants point
out, however, when the switch becomes unsteady, each rollable
body necessarily begins to “roll” at the point where it is at
rest when the switch is in a steady state.
The fact that the
bodies “abut” the tangential areas, then, does not support
24
SignalQuest’s effort to read claim 1 to segregate those areas
from the rolling surfaces.
In sum, the text and structure of claim 1 do not support
SignalQuest’s proffered construction of “tangential areas” as
“not being part of the rolling surfaces” or “rolling surfaces” as
“not including the tangential areas.”
To the contrary, the plain
and ordinary meaning of those terms, as used in the claim, aligns
with the defendants’ proffered construction:
“tangential areas”
means the areas of the rolling surfaces contacted by the rolling
bodies when the rolling bodies touch, and “rolling surfaces”
means the surfaces on which the rolling bodies roll.
6.
“farthermost area”
Again, claim 1 states that the “first and second rolling
surfaces respectively defin[e] first and second farthermost areas
which are spaced apart from each other by a first length along a
centerline.”
The claim further teaches that
once the support is caused to quiver in an unsteady
state, [the] first and second electrically conductive
rollable bodies will be caused to lurch towards one
[the] first and second farthermost areas so that one of
[the] first and second electrically conductive rollable
bodies is out of contact with a corresponding one of
[the] first and second rolling surfaces which defines
the other one of [the] first and second farthermost
areas, thereby breaking the electric contact between
[the] first and second electric contact bodies.
25
SignalQuest argues that each “farthermost area” is “the point of
the [respective] rolling surface that is furthest from the
[opposite] rolling surface and furthest from [the same]
surrounding region” (e.g., the “first farthermost area is the
point of the first rolling surface that is furthest from the
second rolling surface and furthest from the first surrounding
region”).
But the defendants argue that the farthermost areas
are simply the “[a]reas where the bodies are spaced apart.”
The plain and ordinary meaning of “farthermost” is simply
“farthest,” as in “most distant.”
Because, again, claim 1 states
that the first and second rolling surfaces “respectively defin[e]
first and second farthermost areas which are spaced apart from
each other by a first length along a center line,” the
description of those areas as “farthermost” indicates that they
are, as SignalQuest suggests, the area of each rolling surface
that lies at the greatest distance from the other.
But the claim
language does not fully support SignalQuest’s proffered
construction of “farthermost area” as “the point of the
[respective] rolling surface that is furthest from the [opposite]
rolling surface,” because an “area,” by definition, is not a
“point.”
Cf. SecurityPoint Holdings, Inc. v. United States, 111
Fed. Cl. 1, 8-9 (Fed. Cl. 2013) (declining to read the claim
terms “proximate end” and “distal end” to refer to “a precise
26
point as compared to a more general area at the extent or
boundary of something”).
Nor is there any support in the claim
language for SignalQuest’s additional proposed limitation, i.e.,
that each farthermost area is also the “point . . . that is
farthest from [the same] surrounding region,” since, again, an
“area” is not a “point,” and, for that matter, the term
“surrounding region” does not appear in claim 1, but only in
dependent claim 3.
As already noted, courts generally avoid
reading limitations from a dependent claim into an independent
claim in this manner.
See Virnetx, 767 F.3d at 1316.
The court agrees with SignalQuest, however, that the
defendants’ proposed construction of “farthermost areas” as
merely “areas where bodies are spaced apart” does not quite do
the trick either.
Again, claim 1 teaches that the first and
second electric contact bodies “have first and second rolling
surfaces that are spaced apart from each other along a
centerline,” but that these rolling surfaces in turn “define
first and second farthermost areas which are spaced apart from
each other by a first length along the centerline.”
Claim 1 goes
on to state that the “sum of the first width and the second
widths” of the rollable bodies is “smaller than the first length
and larger than the second length” (the “second length” is the
distance between the tangential areas “when projected on a
27
longitudinal line in a longitudinal direction”).
It follows that
the farthermost areas are not merely the “areas where the
[electric contact bodies] are spaced apart,” but where they are
spaced apart by the “first length.”
This construction receives
additional support from the only figures from the patent that
label the farthermost areas:
those figures place the farthermost
areas at either end of the first length.
“In construing a patent, this court’s ‘task is not to decide
which of the adversaries is correct’ in its proffered
interpretation, but to fulfill the court’s ‘independent
obligation to determine the meaning of the claims,
notwithstanding the views asserted by the adversary parties.’”
Best Mgmt. Prods., Inc. v. New Eng. Fiberglass, L.L.C., 2008 DNH
099, 2 n.2 (quoting Exxon Chem. Patents, Inc. v. Lubrizol Corp.,
64 F.3d 1553, 1555-56 (Fed. Cir. 1995)).
Doing so here, the
court construes “farthermost area” to mean the area defined by
each rolling surface that is distant from the other rolling
surface by the first length.
B.
Dependent claims
1.
“integrally formed” (claims 7, 10)
As already noted, dependent claim 7 (as well as dependent
claim 10) disclose a switch wherein the “first electric contact
28
body and [the] first electric terminal are integrally formed with
[the] housing.”
See Part II.A.1, supra.
SignalQuest argues that
this means the contact body and terminal are “formed as an
extension of, and not separable from,” the housing, while the
defendants argue that “integrally formed” simply means “united.”
As the defendants point out, the plain and ordinary meaning
of “integral” is simply “formed as a unit with another part,” as
the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has recognized.
Vanguard Prods. Corp. v. Parker Hannifin Corp., 234 F.3d 1370,
1371-72 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (construing “integral therewith”).
The
plain and ordinary meaning of “integrally formed,” then, would
seem to be the same, i.e., “formed as a unit.”
Here, then,
claims 7 and 10 require simply that the first electric contact
body and first electric terminal are formed as a unit with the
housing.
There is no support for the additional limitation urged
by SignalQuest, i.e., that the contact body and terminal are also
an “extension” of and are “not separable” from the housing.
While SignalQuest (as it does in support of many of its proffered
constructions) relies on certain of the patent’s accompanying
drawings, those two figures provide no indication as to whether
the contact body and terminal are “separable” from the housing
and, again, drawings generally should not be used to limit the
plain and ordinary meaning of claim language.
29
See Anchor Wall
Systems, 340 F.3d at 1306-07.
Accordingly, the court construes
the requirement in dependent claims 7 and 10 that the “first
electric contact body and [the] first electric terminal are
integrally formed with [the] housing” to require simply that the
first electric contact body and first electric terminal are
“formed as a unit” with the housing.
2.
“surrounding regions” (claim 3)
As also already noted, see Part II.A.6, supra, claim 3
describes a switch “wherein [the] first and second tangential
areas extend to surround the centerline so as to form first and
second surrounding regions, respectively.”
SignalQuest argues
that the “surrounding regions” are the “surfaces covered only by
the first and second tangential areas,” while the defendants
argue that the term means simply the “portions”--the defendants
do not say of what--“extending around the centerline.”
The language of dependent claim 3 clearly describes the
“surrounding regions” as “exten[sions]” of the tangential areas
beyond their definitions as set forth in independent claim 1.
Accordingly, if SignalQuest means by its proffered construction
that the surrounding regions are the same as the tangential
areas, then that construction cannot be correct.
In the few
sentences of its briefing that it devotes to its proffered
interpretation of “tangential areas,” SignalQuest does not
30
identify any support for it--aside from references to one of the
drawings, a cross-section view which does not separately identify
the “surrounding regions” and would therefore appear irrelevant
to their proper definition.
In accordance with the plain
language of claim 3, then, the court construes “surrounding
regions” as extensions of the tangential areas that surround the
centerline.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the court adopts the
foregoing constructions of the disputed claim terms.
SO ORDERED.
____________________________
Joseph N. Laplante
United States District Judge
Dated: February 4, 2015
cc:
Brian David Thomas, Esq.
Peter Anthony Nieves, Esq.
Robert R. Lucic, Esq.
Mark C. Rouvalis, Esq.
Nicholas F. Casolaro, Esq.
Timothy N. Trop, Esq.
31
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