UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH OF THE COMMONWEALTH SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCTION v. VARIAN MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC.
Filing
432
MEMORANDUM OPINION on Summary Judgment. Signed by Judge Arthur J. Schwab on 12-30-11. (nam)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH OF THE
COMMONWEALTH SYSTEM OF HIGHER
EDUCATION,
Plaintiff,
08cv01307
ELECTRONICALLY
FILED
v.
VARIAN MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC.,
Defendant.
Memorandum Opinion on Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
I.
Introduction
This is an action in patent infringement. Plaintiff, University of Pittsburgh of the
Commonwealth System of Higher Education (hereinafter ―Pitt‖ or ―plaintiff‖), alleges that
defendant Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (hereinafter ―Varian‖ or ―defendant‖) has infringed its
patent (U.S. Patent No. 5,727,554) (hereinafter ―the patent,‖ or ―the ‗554 Patent‖) by making and
selling the RPM Respiratory Gating System (hereinafter ―the RPM System‖). Varian denies
that its product (and/or modified product) infringes Pitt‘s patent,1 and further argues that Pitt
cannot establish willful infringement. Defendant also contends that the asserted patent is invalid,
for lack of enablement, and that Pitt‘s measure of damages is improper.2
Defendant filed an Answer and Counterclaim, seeking a declaration that the claims of the ‗554
Patent are invalid, and that the products of Varian do not infringe any of the asserted claims of
the ‗554 Patent, and asserted numerous defenses including failure to state a claim, patent
invalidity, estoppel, laches, and authorization and consent of the United States Government.
Doc. No. 355.
1
2
This Court previously granted Pitt‘s Motion to Strike Varian‘s Untimely Non-Infringement
Defense regarding its Non-Treatment RPM‘s (doc. no. 403). Pitt argues, and this Court agrees,
that after nearly six (6) years of protracted discovery and litigation, it would be unfair and overly
1
Before this Court is Pitt‘s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, and Varian‘s Motion
for Summary Judgment, respectively (doc. nos. 363 and 364). After careful consideration of the
voluminous summary judgment records, and the legal arguments of the parties, the Court has
GRANTED and entered partial summary judgment in Pitt‘s favor, finding as a matter of law that
Varian‘s RPM System (and The Modified RPM System) infringes the ‗554 Patent. See Doc. No.
425. The Court has DENIED Defendant‘s Motion for Summary Judgment with respect to
invalidity, damages, and willful infringement. This issue of willfulness will be the sole subject
of the jury trial set to commence on January 23, 2012. See Doc. No. 426.
II.
Procedural History
This particular lawsuit has a lengthy procedural history dating back to June 16, 2008,
when Pitt filed the instant action against Varian alleging that Varian‘s product, the RPM Gating
System, which is radiotherapy equipment for the treatment of cancer, infringes Pitt‘s ‗554 Patent,
prejudicial to Pitt to allow Varian to set forth a new theory of non-infringement, which would in
turn require a reopening of both fact and expert discovery. Local Patent Rule 3.4 obligated
Varian to identify its reasons for claiming non-infringement by the accused products, including
Non-Treatment RPMs, on July 6, 2010 (later amended on July 26, 2010). Doc. No. 57-8. Varian
made no such mention of this defense, and so no discovery occurred with respect to this defense.
At this late juncture, the Court will not countenance Varian‘s attempt to side-step the Local
Patent Rules, and Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 16(f) and 37(c)(1) which mandate that
discovery should have occurred within a preset time table. In the interests of completeness of the
record, however, the Court has included Varian‘s counter-factual allegations regarding this
belated defense, but the Court has not based its decision on them, because discovery closed on
December 8, 2010, and it would give Varian an unfair advantage to allow it to present a defense
that was not disclosed in a timely and fair manner. Given the protracted history of this case, the
Court declines any request for further discovery and or expert discovery, as untimely. See
AstraZeneca AB v. Mutual Pharm. Co., Inc. 278 F. Supp. 491, 507 (E.D. Pa. 2003)(citations
omitted) (excluding untimely submission of prior art, testing results, and expert testimony
offered during summary judgment proceedings).
2
which also concerns an application for radiation therapy. This lawsuit (―Varian II‖) is the
second action which Pitt has commenced against Varian claiming an alleged infringement of the
‗554 patent. This Court dismissed the first action (―Varian I‖) for lack of standing. See Civil
Action 07-cv-491. During the pendency of the appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit in Varian I, Pitt filed the instant action (Varian II). This Court dismissed
Varian II on res judicata grounds (doc. no. 106). Pitt then appealed this decision (doc. no. 120).
While Varian II was on appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed this Court‘s judgment and
remanded Varian I. (07-cv-491, doc. no. 344). The parties then reached an agreement pursuant
to which the dismissal of Varian II would be vacated, the appeal in Varian II would be
dismissed, and this case would proceeds on the merits (doc. no. 152).
During the pendency of the appeals in Varian I and II, Varian filed an ex parte request
with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (―PTO‖) requesting a reexamination of all
of the ―disputed‖ claims. The PTO reexamined the ‗554 Patent in light of the prior art, which
Varian claimed rendered the disputed patent claims invalid. The PTO issued a reexamination
certificate confirming the claims that were under reexamination, and added additional patent
claims (Claims 23-28) that Pitt had submitted during the reexamination proceedings. At the
conclusion of the reexamination proceedings, Claims 20-22 of the ‗554 Patent were deemed
valid.
By Order of this Court of June 18, 2010 (doc. no. 182), pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 53,
this Court appointed the Honorable Donald E. Ziegler as Special Master in this action to conduct
a claim construction hearing, and to set forth his findings in a Report and Recommendation,
which the Court received on April 6, 2011 (doc. no. 283). After hearing the objections of the
parties, and the motions to adopt/modify the Report and Recommendation, on May 16, 2011, this
3
Court issued a Memorandum Opinion and Order thereon (doc. nos. 302 and 303). This Court
affirmed and adopted the Report and Recommendation of the Special Master as the Opinion of
the Court with only three (3) modifications (doc. no. 303). The Court then set a status
conference to discuss scheduling matters, and the parties elected that this Court, rather than a
Special Master (in the first instance), hear the instant summary judgment motions. During the
status conference, in addition to setting deadlines for the instant motions, the Court asked the
parties to brief the issue of whether a ruling on the liability aspects of the summary judgment
motions would compel an appeal to the Federal Circuit as a final order, and/or whether any such
ruling would constitute an Interlocutory Order (which the Court would need to ―certify‖ as
interlocutory, and would be subject to the discretion of the Federal Circuit) (doc. no. 307).
Following the status conference, the parties submitted a joint brief (doc. no. 315), essentially
concluding the following:
The Court‘s ruling on the parties‘ summary judgment motions could result in an
appealable judgment, either because it is final (in favor of Varian) or final
except for damages issues (in favor of Pitt) within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. §
1292(c)(2). The Court has the power to certify other interlocutory orders for
appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), but the Federal Circuit is unlikely to accept
such a certified order for appeal. In any event, the Court‘s ruling on motions
related to damages will not hinder either party‘s ability to appeal any of the
Court‘s rulings.
The parties then filed a stipulation setting forth the briefing schedule for the pending
motions for summary judgment (doc. no. 316), and the motions were ordered to be fully briefed
as of December 19, 2011. However, all replies were not received until December 20, 2011.
III.
Factual Background
A summary of the factual and technical background of this case can be found in the
Special Master‘s Report and Recommendation on Claim Construction (doc. no. 283) and this
4
Court‘s Opinion affirming the Report and Recommendation. Doc. No. 302. The parties have
amassed over 100 pages of facts, but the factual background may be fairly stated as follows. See
Doc. Nos. 380, 389. 401, 421.
The „554 Patent
On March 17, 1998, U.S. Patent No. 5,727,554 (the ‗554 Patent) was duly issued by the
Patent and Trademark Office. Plaintiff, Pitt, owns the ‗554 Patent which is the subject of this
lawsuit.
The ‗554 Patent claims an apparatus for turning on and off a radiation treatment beam
synchronously with a patient‘s breathing. The claimed apparatus comprises a system that uses a
video camera and imaging process equipment to monitor patient movement, including breathing.
The system identifies and tracks in a video image certain markers on a patient‘s body
(―fiducials‖). The markers, or fiducials, may be reference markers placed on the patient
(―artificial fiducials‖) or natural features on the patient‘s body (―natural fiducials‖). The
invention claimed by the ‗554 Patent turns off a radiation treatment beam when the cancerous
tumor that is the subject of treatment moves out of the beam‘s path, as a result of breathing, and
turns back on when the tumor re-enters the path of the beam.
The RPM System
Varian manufactures, sells, and services equipment and software for the medical use of
radiation for treatment and diagnosis. The alleged infringing system, entitled the Real-Time
Position Management (―RPM‖) Respiratory Gating System (―RPM System‖), has been sold by
Varian in the United States and abroad since approximately June 10, 1999. Varian‘s RPM
Respiratory Gating System has been manufactured and partially assembled at Varian‘s
manufacturing plant in Palo Alto, CA from 2001, until the present. The remaining assembly
5
occurs at the customer sites, including abroad (there appears to be no genuine dispute that the
Systems are made and sold in the United States). See Doc. No. 400-31 at 48 (―RPM System
manufactured and assembled in Palo Alto, CA.‖)
Varian‘s RPM System is a video-based system that monitors and tracks patient
respiratory movement during radiotherapy treatment. It generates gating signals that turn on and
off a radiotherapy treatment beam in synchronization with respiratory motion. Non-Treatment
RPM Systems are used with CT and PET scanners to locate and identify a tumor to be subjected
to radiotherapy treatment. Treatment RPMs are used with beam generators, one component of
linear accelerator systems, in the radiotherapy treatment process itself.
Specifically, the RPM System (designed for use with Varian‘s Clinac and Trilogy
radiotherapy treatment machines) using an infrared tracking camera, infrared illuminator rings,
and reflective markers on the marker block system, measures the patient‘s respiratory pattern and
range of motion and displays them as a waveform on a work station monitor. The parties contest
whether the Non-Treatment RPMs infringe the ‗554 Patent because, unlike the Treatment RPMs,
they are not used for radiotherapy treatment.
Nonetheless, the parties agree that the RPM System (at least the Treatment RPMs) is
used to obtain tracking of the subject respiratory patent for respiratory image acquisition, and
radiation therapy treatment. The RPM System can also be used to monitor the patient position
during the image acquisition, simulation, and treatment.
The RPM System includes a charge-coupled device (―CCD‖) camera referred to as a
tracking camera, which is sensitive to infrared and visible light. Although the parties dispute
whether the use of a marker is inherent to, or only one feature of, the RPM System, they agree
that a marker block is placed on the patient‘s chest or abdomen and the video camera generates
6
images of the patient with the marker block. The parties agree that the RPM System tracks
patient respiration motion using a video camera connected to a PC workstation. However, the
parties dispute whether movement of the marker block serves as a surrogate for movement of the
tumor. While Pitt claims that it does, Varian contends that the marker block can only be
considered a surrogate for movement of the tumor if additional equipment beyond the RPM
System is used to correlate marker block motion with tumor motion.
The parties agree that the RPM System includes a video-frame grabber board, which is a
digitizer that functions to digitize the incoming video signal and generates a ―digital image.‖
The frame-grabber generates a digitized video signal having an array of 640 x 480 pixels, with
each pixel represented in eight (8) bits. The RPM System includes a Windows-based
workstation with an Intel Pentium processor. The RPM workstation runs software that processes
the digitized video signal from the video camera and generates a signal, albeit they dispute that it
is termed a ―gating signal.‖
The RPM System is programmed to identify fiducials in the ―image signals.‖ Varian
disputes use of the term ―image signals‖ to the extent that the term is intended to include digital
images of the patient, and claims that the RPM System does not use images of the patient, and
instead uses coordinates of the marker centroids, whereby only the reflective markers remain.
The parties agree that the RPM System includes a marker block having multiple two (2)
or six (6) reflective markers on a plastic base, and these markers are ―artificial‖ reflective
markers. The retroreflective markers on the marker block are fiducials. The parties, however,
dispute whether the marker block itself is a fiducial. The marker block, including the markers, is
placed on the patient, the patient is positioned on the couch in the field of view of the camera and
the marker block is placed on the patient and moves with the patient‘s breathing.
7
The RPM System tracks the motion of the (conceptualized) marker block to determine
breathing motion of the patient. While Pitt contends that the RPM System determines the
coordinates of the marker block, Varian denies that statement and claims that the RPM System
―merely determines the coordinates of individual marker centroids and uses that information to
calculate the coordinates of a single point.‖ Doc. No. 389 at 7, ¶ 26. The images captured by the
camera of the RPM System include the markers placed on the patient, and the reflective markers
appear in the video signals that the camera sends to the workstation computer. The parties
debate whether all patient motion data is calculated based on the motion of the markers. The
RPM System displays the patient‘s breathing motion in the amplitude-based display, which
provides a real-time graph of the patient‘s breathing. While Pitt contends that the RPM System
determines patient breathing by using the movement of the marker as a surrogate, Varian argues
that the System determines the position of a single calculated point at different points in time
based on coordinates of the marker centroid. The parties also debate whether or not the RPM
System senses the respiration motion of the patient by tracking two or six passive reflective
markers on a marker block.
In gated radiotherapy, the RPM Respiratory Gating System sends a signal to the Clinac
accelerator to stop the radiation beam (Varian admits this statement only with respect to
Treatment RPM‘s not with respect to Non-Treatment RPM‘s such as those used with PET and
CT scanners (RPM-PET/CT)). While Pitt claims that this switching on and off of the treatment
beam with respiration motion synchronizes treatment delivery with respiration, Varian denies
this alleged fact on the basis that the RPM does not ―switch on‖ the treatment beam. According
to Pitt, the RPM System includes run by the PC workstation that generates ―gating signals‖
synchronized to actuate the treatment beam of the Clinac accelerator in synchronism with patient
8
breathing. Varian denies that the RPM generates ―gating signals,‖ and argues that there are no
RPM signals that ―actuate‖ the treatment beam of the Clinac accelerator.
Again, the parties debate whether the technique of respiratory gating ―starts and stops‖ a
treatment beam - - metaphorically speaking, opening and shutting a gate that holds in radiation
according to a pattern of breathing. While Pitt contends that the ―gating signal‖ created by the
RPM System is the signal from which the RPM Respiratory Gating System to Varian‘s Clinac
machine turns the radiation beam on or off, Varian counters that the RPM System does not create
a ―gating signal‖ and RPM does not send a signal to the Clinac machine which turns on the
radiation beam. In addition, according to Varian, RPM-PET/CT lacks hardware needed to
enable it to operate together with a treatment beam. Nonetheless, through an interface provided
by the workstation, the clinician is able to set a threshold that, if exceeded, will generate a beam
hold signal (again, Varian denies this as a ―gating signal‖) to turn off the treatment beam
produced by the beam generator.
According to Pitt, if the patient returns to the proper position within the threshold, the
RPM will generate a signal to turn ―on‖ the treatment beam, and the RPM System can turn the
treatment beam on and off. Varian disagrees with Pitt and claims that the RPM does not
generate a signal to turn ―on‖ the beam. Once gating is enabled, the system begins sending
beam-on and beam-off signals to the Clinac machine according to the thresholds established in
the reference session; but again, Varian claims that the RPM does not send signals to the Clinac
that turn on the radiation beam. Pitt contends that if the other safety or operation features of the
Clinac accelerator are not causing a beam hold, the RPM System will act to both turn the beam
on and off. Varian posits that the RPM does not ―turn on‖ the beam ―but merely asserts or does
not assert a beam hold.‖ Doc. No. 389 at 12, ¶ 40.
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Enabling gating makes the RPM Respiratory Gating System send a pre-established signal
to Varian‘s Clinac to trigger beam-enable at the start of the specified respiratory phase and a
signal to either ―trigger beam-hold‖ (as Pitt claims) or ―stop asserting beam hold‖ (as Varian
claims) during the part of the respiration cycle that is outside the gated interval.
All versions of the RPM System had the same basic functionality - - to identify and track
markers and set thresholds for gating. The RPM System is used during treatment of the patient
with Varian‘s Clinac accelerator. The RPM workstation includes two monitors. According to
Pitt, the workstation computer causes the in-room monitor to display a section of green light
when the movement of the markers, due to the patient‘s breathing, is within a preferred
tolerance. The workstation computer turns off the green light when the movement of the marker,
due the patient‘s breathing, is outside a preferred tolerance. Varian disputes these facts and
claims that any green light on the monitor is based upon the position of a single calculated point,
not ―movement of the marker,‖ and that, in any event, defendant does not ―supply the monitor to
which Pitt refers.‖ Doc. No. 389. at 13, ¶¶ 45-46.
Varian‟s Clinac and Trilogy Systems
Varian has sold (in the United States and abroad) its Clinac linear accelerator at least as
long as it has been selling its RPM Respiratory Gating System. The Clinac beam generator is
manufactured and partially assembled in Palo Alto, CA, and, like the RPM System, requires
further assembly at the customer site.
Varian‘s Trilogy Systems is composed of a suite of Varian products including the Clinac
iX linear accelerator. The RPM System and beam generator ―component‖ of Trilogy (as
―bundled with Trilogy at one time‖) are manufactured and partially assembled in Palo Alto, CA,
and also require further ―final‖ assembly at the customer site. Varian‘s Clinac and Trilogy
10
devices are designed to deliver radiation therapy to treat tumors, and according to Varian, ―is just
one component of the complete Clinac and Trilogy systems.‖ Doc. No. 389 at 15, ¶ 51.
Varian‘s Clinac and Trilogy devices are used with the RPM System, but they can also be
purchased and/or used without an RPM system. Varian‘s RPM System is sold as an option to
Varian‘s Clinac devices, but Varian denies that statement with respect to Non Treatment RPM
Systems (those used with PET/CT scanners), which Varian claims lacks the hardware needed to
enable it to operate together with Clinac or Trilogy. Varian‘s RPM Respiratory Gating System
(minus Non Treatment RPM-PET/CT) was bundled with Trilogy between 2005 and 2007, but
also has been available as ―an option‖ with Trilogy.
Varian‘s Clinac accelerator is a medical linear accelerator used to provide radiotherapy
treatment to patients. Accelerators include beam generators. Other components of the Clinac
accelerators include a workstation, console computer, electronics cabinet, gantry, collimator, and
multi-leaf collimator, and treatment couch. C-series, Clinac iX, and Trilogy accelerators are
controlled using C-series control software.
Clinac accelerators operate with the RPM System to turn the treatment beam on and off
based on respiratory motion (with respect to ―Treatment RPMs‖). At least with respect to
Treatment RPMs, the RPM System is physically connected to the Clinac accelerator during
installation. As part of the system verification procedure, according to Pitt, the installer will
operate the RPM System causing the Clinac accelerator to turn the treatment beam on and off.
As noted above, Varian debates the contention that the accelerator turns ―on and off,‖ and it
claims that the RPM System does not cause the Clinac to turn the treatment beam on, rather it
merely stops asserting beam hold. Nonetheless, the parties agree that the Clinac accelerator
includes a beam hold icon that indicates when the treatment beam is being held, and the beam
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hold icon is displayed on the monitor of the Clinac console. A black-on-yellow ―beam hold‖
message is displayed instead of the ―beam on‖ message to indicate when the RPM System is
being held (according to Varian), or withholding the beam (according to Pitt).
Clinac accelerators are generally equipped with a multileaf collimator (hereinafter
―MLC‖). The Trilogy systems generally include the Millennium MLC. The MLC is a device
that shapes the treatment beam to conform to the shape of the tumor. Treatment that conforms to
the shape of the tumor is referred to as conformal radiotherapy. Clinac accelerators are capable
of operating with the RPM System while providing conformal radiotherapy. Clinac accelerators
are capable of generating multiple beams from different directions in a conformal therapy.
During installation (at least with respect to Treatment RPMs) the technician ensures that
the dynamic MLC mode of the Clinac is enabled so that the RPM System will operate to hold the
treatment beam or not hold the beam. With version 8.0 of the C-series control software (at least
with respect to Treatment RPMs), the Clinac accelerator can implement Gated RapidArc
treatment deliveries in which RapidArc treatment deliveries are gated using the RPM System.
Gated RapidArc Treatment is a computer-controlled conformal treatment that involves
movement of the gantry to deliver different treatment beams to the patient from different angles.
Clinac accelerators are capable of operating with the RPM System to work with intensitymodulated radiotherapy (―IMRT‖). IMRT is a type of conformal radiotherapy. IMRT is a
treatment modality that better conforms to the shape of the tumor by modulating the intensity of
the radiation beam. The Clinac accelerator may be operated in a segmental IMRT treatment
mode, also known as ―step-and-shoot.‖ In the ―step-and-shoot‖ mode, the MLC is moved in a
series of positions while the treatment beam is off, and when a position is reached, the treatment
beam is turned on. While Pitt contends that Clinac accelerators are also capable of operating
12
with the RPM System to provide dose dynamic radiotherapy, Varian denies that contention and
claims that Clinac independently provides dose dynamic radiotherapy and the RPM System
merely offers the option of gating the beam during dose dynamic radiotherapy.
Dose dynamic treatment is a type of dynamic therapy in which the leaves of the MLC
move while the beam is being generated, but Varian emphasizes that dynamic treatment does not
always operate in that manner. While Pitt argues that dose dynamic therapy is a form of IMRT,
Varian denies that statement on the basis that there is an ―intersection‖ between dose dynamic
therapy and IMRT, but one is not a subset of the other. Clinac accelerators are configured to
provide radiation therapy treatment under computer control, and are capable of generating
multiple beams from different directions in a conformal therapy. Although not all Clinac
systems include a MLC, Clinac accelerators include a gantry that contains the MLC for shaping
the beam and can rotate around the treatment couch to deliver treatments.
IV.
Standard of Review
The summary judgment standard in a patent case is the same as in other civil cases.
Summary Judgment is appropriate when it is apparent from the entire record, viewed in the light
most favorable to the non-moving party, that there are no genuine issues of material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-24 (1986). One of the principal purposes of the
summary judgment rule is to isolate and dispose of factually unsupported claims or defenses.
Therefore, summary judgment is required, ―against a party who fails to make a sufficient
showing to establish the existence of an element essential to that party‘s case, and on which that
party will bear the burden of proof at trial.‖ Id. at 322. The summary judgment inquiry asks
whether there is a need for trial – ―whether, in other words, there are any genuine factual issues
13
that properly can be resolved only by a finder of fact because they may reasonably be resolved in
favor of either party.‖ Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 250 (1986).
A.
Infringement
1.
Literal Infringement
Patent infringement analysis involves a two-step process: first, the claims are construed,
as a matter of law, and second, the properly construed claims are compared to the allegedly
infringing device to determine, as a matter of fact, whether all of the limitations of at least one
claim are present in the accused device. Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc., 517 U.S. 370,
374 (1996); Teleflex, Inc. v. Ficosa N. Am. Corp., 299 F.3d 1313, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2002).
Summary judgment is appropriate where there is no genuine issue of material fact as to whether
the asserted claims read on the accused device, or where no reasonable jury could find that every
limitation from an asserted claim is or is not found in the accused device, either literally or under
the doctrine of equivalents. PC Connector Solutions LLC v. SmartDisk Corp., 406 F.3d 1359,
1364 (Fed. Cir. 2005); Bai v. L & L Wings, Inc., 160 F.3d 1350, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 1998); Lifescan,
Inc. v. Home Diagnostics, Inc. 76 F.3d 358, 359 (Fed. Cir. 1996).
2.
Doctrine of Equivalents Infringement
Even where an accused device does not infringe literally, it may still be found to infringe
under the doctrine of equivalents. An infringement under this doctrine occurs when the
differences between the accused device and the claim limitation are ―insubstantial,‖ meaning that
―the element performs substantially the same function in substantially the saw way to obtain
substantially the same result as the claim limitation.‖ Zelinski v. Brunswick Corp, 185 F.3d
1311, 1316-17 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citations omitted). This doctrine prohibits a party from avoiding
infringement liability by making only ―insubstantial‖ changes and substitutions which, though
14
adding nothing, would be sufficient to make the copy fall outside the claim, and therefore,
outside the reach of the law. American Calcar, Inc. v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc., 651
F.3d 1318, 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2011).
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has reiterated that in the
context of summary judgment, a patent holder must provide particularized testimony, and a
linking argument setting forth the ―insubstantiality of the difference‖ between the claimed
invention, and the accused device on a limitation-by-limitation basis. Network Commerce, Inc.
v. Microsoft Corp., 422 F.3d 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (citing cases). Where the evidence is such
that no reasonable jury could determine that an accused device includes an equivalent of each
and every one of the limitations of an asserted claim, it is appropriate to enter judgment as a
matter of law on this theory of infringement. DePuy Spine, Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek,
Inc., 469 F.3d 1005, 1017 (Fed. Cir. 2006).
B.
Invalidity
An issued patent is presumed to be valid. 35 U.S.C. § 282; Invitrogen Corp. v. Biocrest
Mfg., L.P., 424 F.3d 1374, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2005). Indeed, a party that is ―otherwise an infringer
who assails the validity of a patent fair upon its face bears a heavy burden of persuasion, and
fails unless his evidence has more than a dubious preponderance.‖ American Hoist & Derrick
Co. v. Sowa & Sons, Inc., 725 F.2d 1350, 1359 (Fed. Cir. 1984)(citation omitted). In other
words, in order to overcome the presumption of validity, the party challenging the patent must
prove invalidity by clear and convincing evidence. Schumer v. Lab. Computer Sys., Inc., 308
F.3d 1304, 1315 (Fed. Cir. 2002).
In addition, the attacking party must overcome the deference that is due to the PTO
examiner, who is presumed to have properly done his or her job in issuing the patent. Am. Hoist
15
& Derrick Co., 725 F.2d at 1359. Notably, however, no deference is due the examiner‘s decision
with respect to new evidence that was not before the PTO, and therefore, was not considered by
the examiner in issuing the patent. Id. at 1360. Nevertheless, and regardless of whether the
PTO‘s decision is entitled to deference, the burden of proof remains ―constant and never
changes‖ and requires the attacking party to ―convince the court of invalidity by clear evidence.‖
Id.
C.
Written Description/Enablement
The written description requirement is set forth at 35 U.S.C.A. § 112, which states:
The specification shall contain a written description of the invention, and of the
manner and process of making and using it, in such full, clear, concise, and
exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains, or with
which it is most nearly connected, to make and use the same.
In other words, if the patent specification teaches those skilled in the art how to make and
use the full scope of the claim invention without undue experimentation, the enablement
requirement is met. Genentech, Inc. v. Novo Nordisk A/S, 108 F.3d 1361, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 1997)
(citing cases). The fact that some experimentation is needed in order to practice the claim
invention is permissible, as long as it is not undue. Atlas Powder Co. v. E.I. du Pont De
Nemours & Co., 750 F.2d 1569, 1576 (Fed. Cir. 1984). Enablement is a question of law based
on the underlying facts, and the issue is to be determined as of the filing date of the patent
application. E.g., Falkner v. Inglis, 448 F.3d 1357, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2006); Hybritech Inc. v.
Monoclonal Antibodies, Inc., 802 F.2d 1367, 1384 (Fed. Cir. 1986). Summary judgment may be
granted where the full scope of the claimed invention is not enabled. See Sitrick v. Dreamworks,
LLC, 516 F.3d 993, 999-1001 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (affirming grant of summary judgment on non-
16
enablement). (See Section (V)(H) below, discussing Powell v. Home Depot, __ F.3d. __, 100
U.S.P.Q. 1742 (Fed. Cir. November 14, 2011), and other applicable cases).
D.
Willful Infringement
When it is found that an infringer acted without a reasonable belief that its actions would
avoid infringement, the patentee has established ―willful infringement,‖ which may be
accompanied by enhanced damages. Vulcan Engineering, Co. Inc. v. Fata Aluminium, Inc., 278
F.3d 1366, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2002). Whether infringement is willful is a question of fact, and is
determined from totality of the circumstances. See Gustafson, Inc. v. Intersystems Indus.
Products, Inc., 897 F.2d 508, 510 (Fed. Cir. 1990). A finding of willful infringement is made
where there is clear and convincing evidence to show that: (1) ―the infringer acted despite an
objectively high likelihood that its actions constituted infringement of a valid patent,‖ and (2)
―this objectively-defined risk was either known or so obvious that it should have been known to
the accused infringer.‖ In re Seagate Technology, LLC, 497 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2007). The
inquiry focuses on the infringer‘s pre-litigation conduct. Id. at 1373.
V.
Discussion
Pitt has moved for partial summary judgment (as to liability) on the basis that: (1)
Varian‘s RPM System infringes Claim 20 of the ‗554 Patent as a matter of law; (2) the RPM
System infringes Claims 21, 25, 26 and 36 of the ‗554 Patent as a matter of law; and (3) the
combination of the RPM System and Clinac and Trilogy Linear Accelerators infringes Claims 38
and 22 of the ‗554 Patent. Doc. No. 363.
Varian, on the other hand, has moved for summary judgment on the grounds of invalidity
for lack of enablement, lack of damages (Entire Market Value Rule allegedly precludes Pitt from
obtaining royalties on sales of linear accelerators), non-infringement due to ―incapacity‖ (which
17
was subject of Pitt‘s previously granted Motion to Strike), non-infringement of the redesigned
(or modified) RPM System, and willfulness. Doc. No. 364.
For the reasons that follow, the Court has granted Pitt‘s Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment, denied Varian‘s Motion for Summary Judgment regarding invalidity, denied Varian‘s
Motion for Summary Judgment regarding damages, found the redesigned RPM System infringes
as a matter of law (literally and under the doctrine of equivalents), and stricken Varian‘s belated
defense of non-infringement due to ―incapacity.‖ See Doc. No. 425. The Court finds that the
issue of willfulness must proceed before a jury, and thus the Court denied Varian‘s Motion for
Summary Judgment as to the issue of willfulness. See Doc. No. 425.
A.
Varian Infringes Claim 20 By Making and Selling The RPM System
Plaintiff has moved for partial summary judgment on the basis that there is no genuine
dispute of material fact that the RPM System satisfies each of the elements of Claim 20, as
construed by the Court.
Claim 20 recites:
20. Apparatus responsive to movement of a patient positioned on a patent
positioning assemble, said apparatus comprising:
Camera means generating digital images signals representative of an image of
said patient; and
Processing means comprising
Meaning determining movement of said patient from said digital image
signals, including movement associated with breathing by said patient, and
Gating means generating gating signals synchronized with said movement
associated with breathing by said patient.
(Emphasis added).
According to Pitt, based upon the claim construction of this Court, the RPM system
meets each of the elements of Claim 20. Pitt attaches as an exhibit a claim chart, compiled by
18
Dr. R. Alredo Siochi (upon which Varian does not object to his declaration at present, but
intends to object to his qualifications/analysis during trial, if any) matching each element of
Claim 20 to corresponding elements of the RPM System that uses a marker block with two
fiducials, and with six fiducials.
The parties do not dispute that each version of the RPM System that Varian made and
sold satisfies the preamble, and the ―camera means‖ element, nor do they dispute that the RPM
System contains a ―processing means.‖ Furthermore, the parties do not contest that the RPM
Systems, used with beam generators (―Treatment RPM‘s‖) meet the ―gating means‖ element of
Claim 20.
It appears that the parties only dispute the means determining movement element
highlighted in the quoted section hereinabove. The means determining movement element is a
means-plus-function term within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 112 (doc. no. 302 at 3-4). During
the claim construction process, this Court construed the function of this element to be
―determining movement of the patient from digital image signals of the patient, including
movement associated with breathing by the patient.‖ Doc. No. 302 at 3, 5-6.
This Court construed the corresponding structure to be ―a computer processor
programmed as a patient motion detector that (1) identifies at least one marker from the image
signals, and (2) tracks its movement, and equivalents.‖ Doc. No. 302 at 4-6.
According to Pitt, there is uncontroverted evidence in the form of expert testimony by
one of a Varian‘s experts, and an article written by Varian employees (see doc. no. 325 and
Exhibit 10 thereof), that the RPM System performs the function of the ―means determining
movement‖ element.
19
Varian counters with two main arguments: (1) the RPM System lacks the corresponding
structures of the ―means determining movement‖ because the RPM algorithm does not track
fiducials, and (2) the RPM does not perform the function of the ―means determining movement‖
because it does not use any image ―of the patient‖ to determine movement.
In support of its first argument (that the RPM algorithm does not track ficucials), Varian
contends that the RPM tracks the position of a single calculated point, not the movement of
individual markers, and analogizes that the RPM approach is like tracking a flock of geese, in
contrast with the ‗554 Patent‘s approach of tracking individual geese in the flock. Varian argues
that the RPM algorithm is not identical to the corresponding structure of the ―means determining
movement‖ of Claim 20, and the RPM System‘s approach of tracking a single, calculated point
is a novelty and that is shown by the fact that Varian obtained its own patent on the marker
block, with the ‗554 patent cited as prior art over which the Varian invention was found to be
patentable. Therefore, according to Varian, any arguments of infringement by equivalents would
be defeated.
Pitt counters, and this Court agrees, that Varian‘s arguments in this regard are without
merit for the following reasons: First, it is indisputable that the RPM System‘s video camera
captures an image of the patient and processes that image in order to locate and track the
individual markers (fiducials) contained within it. Varian‘s own expert on the issue of
infringement agreed with this conclusion. Indeed, he explained that the initial image captured by
the RPM camera includes an image of the patient and that the RPM software uses that image to
locate within it the pixels that represent each of the markers. Doc. No. 325 at 17-20, ¶¶ 44, 48.
Second, the distinction Varian draws between determining movement from the patient‘s image,
and determining movement from the fiducials contained within that image defies logic because
20
there is no meaningful difference between using the image of the patient and using a particular
portion of that image (i.e. the portion representing the fiducials located on the patient‘s body to
determine the patient‘s movement). Thirdly, Varian‘s current position requires that the Court
deem that the digital image signals ―of the patient‖ excludes the markers (or artificial fiducials)
placed on the patient. However, as Pitt correctly notes, the Court already rejected this
interpretation in its Memorandum Opinion on Claim Construction, and like the Special Master,
found that the ―means determining movement‖ does not exclude determining movement from
artificial markers in the image of the patient. Thus, this Court found that the image of the
patient in Claim 20 ―may include both natural and artificial fiducials.‖ Doc. No. 302 at 6.
Varian does not dispute that its markers are artificial fiducials consistent with the ‗554
Patent. Rather, Varian argues that the marker block is not a fiducial or marker because it is a
block on which individual markers are mounted. However, as Pitt emphasizes, this is precisely
the same arrangement as the preferred fiducial disclosed in its ‗554 Patent specification - - ―a
reflective sphere mounted non-reflective base.‖ See ‗554, 3:58-64. Because the preferred
fiducial is not limited to the reflector only, but also includes the base on which the reflector is
mounted, the Court finds that the RPM marker block is not excluded from being a ―fiducial‖ for
the ‗554 Patent because it includes both markers and a base.
As Pitt correctly notes, this Court supported its claim construction by finding that the
preferred fiducial disclosed in the ‗554 Patent is an artificial one. Doc. No. 302 at 7. The ‗554
Patent specification discloses determining movement solely from preferred artificial markers.
The Court is mindful of the fact that it is well settled that ―a claim construction that excludes a
preferred embodiment is ‗rarely, if ever, correct.‘‖ See Dow Chem. Co. v. Sumitomo Chem. Co.,
Ltd., 257 F.3d 1364 (Fed Cir. 2001), and ―would require highly persuasive evidentiary support.‖
21
Vitronics Corp. v. Conceptronic Inc., 90 F.3d 1576, 1583 (Fed. Cir. 1996). The Court
determined that Claim 20 does not exclude determining movement from artificial fiducials, and
therefore, the phrase ―of the patient‖ in the Court‘s claim construction certainly covers devices,
including the RPM System, that determine patient movement from artificial markers in the
digital image of the patient. Varian‘s arguments that the RPM System does not use any digital
image signals of the patient but rather uses only digital image signals of the circular markers on
the marker block to determine the patient‘s position is not convincing, and lacks any proper
evidentiary support.
Accordingly, because this Court found that the ―means determining movement‖ does not
exclude determining movement from artificial markers in the patient image, there is no genuine
factual dispute that the RPM System satisfies the function of the ―means determining movement‖
element.
The parties further dispute whether the structure of the RPM System determines
movement by tracking the markers in the digital image of the patient. Pitt has presented credible
and unrefuted evidence that the RPM System includes ―a computer processor programmed as a
patient motion detector that: (1) identifies at least one marker from the image signals and (2)
tracks its movement, and equivalents.‖
Specifically, Pitt cites Varian‘s technical documents which explicitly state that the RPM
Systems track the markers. According to Varian‘s own RPM Reference Guide Ver. 1.6 (381-15,
Ex. 9, at p.1-11), ―[t]he RPM systems senses respiration motion of the patient by tracking a pair
of passive reflective markers on a marker block.‖ Also, the RPM Reference Guide (at 1-6)
states: ―[t]he video camera and PC workstation (or RPM application installed on the workstation)
tracks markers attached to a synthetic block which, in turn, is placed on the patient‘s chest or
22
abdomen.‖ Also, according to Ver. 1-7 (381-11, Ex. 5, at 67) ―[t]he RPM system senses the
respiration motion of the patient by tracking two or six passive reflective markers (dots) on a
marker block.‖
In response to this competent evidence demonstrating that the RPM System determines
movement by tracking the markers in the digital image of the patients, which was contained in
Varian‘s own product manuals, Varian attempts to distance itself from its own statements by
arguing that ―these statements are not conclusive because they are only intended by Varian to
provide a general description of the RPM [S]ystem for customer reference.‖ Doc. No. 387 at 1920. This Court finds that argument unpersuasive.
As further support for its assertion, Pitt provides the deposition testimony of Varian‘s
witness, Hassan Mostafavi, Ph.D., who was a corporate designee pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. Pro.
30(b)(6). Doc. No. 381-14, Ex. 8. Dr. Mostafavi was designated on behalf of Varian, and thus,
binds the company, with respect to technical information about Varian products related to the
‗554 Patent, including the RPM, and the release date, and the technical distinctions between
versions of Varian products related to the ‗554 Patent. In response to the question, ―Does the
RPM systems actually identify the markers on the marker block?‖ Dr. Mostafavi answered as
follows: ―The – the - it tracks the - - the markers, which are – have a rigid relationship relative to
each other because of the marker block.‖ When questioned again, ―So you‘re actually tracking
the motion of the markers?‖, he answered, ―Yes.‖ Doc. No. 381-14, Ex. 8 at p. 46.
It is the view of this Court, that the above testimony, albeit further clarified by answers at
the deposition which are cited by Varian in its Response in Opposition (doc. no. 387 at 20),
constitutes an admission by Varian that the RPM System determines movement by tracking the
markers in the digital image of the patients. See Custer v. Penn State Geisinger Health System,
23
2005 WL 2860540 (M.D. Pa. 2005) (discussing effect of ―binding admissions‖); See generally,
Resolution Tr. Corp. v. Farmer, No. 92-3310, 1994 WL 317458, at *1 (E.D. Pa. June 24, 1994)
(discussing that purpose of Rule 30(b)(6) is to create testimony that binds the corporation).3
Additionally, to the extent that Varian‘s non-infringement expert, Martin Murphy, Ph.D.
argues that the RPM System does not ―track‖ the markers, his testimony is based on an overly
narrow definition of the word ―track‖ that is not supported by the ‗554 Patent. Dr. Murphy
testified that he defines ―tracking‖ to require reporting the trajectory of the object to the user.
Doc. No. 381-21 at p. 125:15-127:5 and 137:7-25. However, this definition of tracking will be
disregarded as a matter of law because the ‗554 Patent does not require, much less describe,
tracking as reporting the trajectory of markers to the user. Instead, the ‗554 patent specification
describes tracking separately from the information displayed to the user. It is well settled that
claim construction is a matter of law for the Court to determine, and this Court construed the
claim terms in view of the claim language itself, the ‗554 Patent specification, and its
prosecution history. See Markman v. Westview Industries, Inc. 52 F.3d 967, 979 (Fed. Cir.
1995), aff’d, 517 U.S. 370 (1996). Varian may not attempt to avoid liability by inviting the
Court to re-interpret its own claim construction in a manner which is inconsistent with the patent
and its prosecution history.
For all of these reasons, this Court finds that there is no genuine dispute of material fact
that the RPM System satisfies each of the elements of Claim 20, as construed by the Court.
3
The Court finds Resolution Tr. Corp., 1994 WL 317458, to be persuasive on this issue, but
notes that at least one other District Court in this Circuit has held that Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 30(b)(6) testimony is an admissible admission, although not a binding judicial
admission. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. New Horizon Inc., 2008 US Lexis 37571 (E.D. Pa.
May 7, 2008). The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has not yet addressed
this issue.
24
Accordingly, the RPM System indisputably, and as a matter of law, infringes Claim 20 of the
subject patent.
B.
Varian‟s RPM System Infringes Claims Dependent Claims 21, 25, 26
and 36 of the „554 Patent
1.
Claim 21
Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that the RPM System satisfies the elements of Claim
21, literally. The only evidence upon which Varian relies for the contention that RPM System
does not infringe Claim 21, is Varian‘s non—infringement expert‘s (Dr. Murphy‘s) opinion that
it does not infringe Claim 20 (from which Claim 21 depends). Doc. No. 325 at ¶ 89. For the
reasons set forth hereinabove, the RPM System infringes Claim 20 as a matter of law, and
therefore, it follows that it also indisputably infringes Claim 21.
2.
Claim 25
Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that the RPM System satisfies the elements of Claim
25, literally. The only evidence upon which Varian relies for the contention that the RPM
System does not infringe Claim 25, is Dr. Murphy‘s opinion that it does not infringe Claim 21
(from which Claim 25 depends). Doc. No. 325 at ¶ 101. For the reasons set forth hereinabove,
the RPM System infringes Claims 20 and 21 as a matter of law, and therefore, it follows that it
also indisputable infringes Claim 25.
3.
Claim 26
Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that the RPM System satisfies the elements of Claim
26, literally. The only evidence upon which Varian relies for the contention that the RPM
System does not infringe Claim 26, is Dr. Murphy‘s opinion that it does not infringe Claim 21
(from which Claim 26 depends). Doc. No. 325 ¶ 103. For the reasons set forth hereinabove, the
25
RPM System infringes Claims 20, 21 and 25 as a matter of law, and therefore, it follows that it
also indisputably infringes Claim 26.
4.
Claim 36
Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that the RPM System satisfies the elements of Claim
36, literally. The only evidence upon which Varian relies for the contention that the RPM System
does not infringe Claim 36, is Dr. Murphy‘s opinion that it does not infringe Claim 20 (from
which Claim 36 depends). Doc. No. 325 at ¶ 134. For the reasons set forth hereinabove, the
RPM System infringes Claim 20 as a matter of law, and therefore, it follows that it also
indisputably infringes Claim 36.
C.
The Combination of Varian‟s RPM System and Clinac and Trilogy Linear
Accelerators Infringes Claims 38 and 22 of the „554 Patent
Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that Claim 38 depends from Claim 20, and as explained
above, the RPM System satisfies each of the elements of Claim 38 as a matter of law. The only
evidence upon which Varian relies for the contention that the combination of the RPM System
and the Clinac and Trilogy linear accelerators does not infringe Claim 20, is Dr. Murphy‘s
opinion that it does not infringe Claim 20 (from which Claim 38 depends). For the reasons set
forth hereinabove, the combination of the RPM System and the Clinac and Trilogy Linear
Accelerators infringe Claim 38 as a matter of law.
With respect to Claim 22, it also depends from Claim 20, which recites:
The apparatus of claim 20 adapted for use during treatment of said patient with
a radiation beam generated by a beam generator, wherein said gating means
comprises means generating gating signals synchronized to actuate said beam
generator in synchronism with patient breathing.
Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that Claim 22 varies from Claim 20 in the following
two ways. First, in order to be covered by Claim 22, the apparatus of Claim 20 must be ―adapted
26
for use during treatment of said patient with a radiation beam generated by a beam generator.‖
Second, the gating means of Claim 22 varies from the gating means of Claim 20. The gating
means of Claim 22 requires gating signals synchronized ―to actuate said beam generator in
synchronism with patient breathing.‖
―A claim construction analysis must begin and remain centered on the claim language
itself.‖ Innova/Pure Water Inc., v. Safari Water Filtration Sys., Inc. 381 F.3d 1111, 1116 (Fed.
Cir. 2004). With that precept in mind, Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that the phrase ―said
gating means‖ in Claim 20 refers to the ―gating means‖ of Claim 20, and in particular, ―gating
means generating gating signals synchronized with said movement associated with breathing
said patient.‖ Unlike Claim 20, Claim 22 specifically recites the ―beam generator‖ and states
that the beam generator is actuated by the gating signals. Accordingly, Claim 22 encompasses
the beam generator (a Clinac or Trilogy Linear Accelerator).
With the exception of Dr. Murphy‘s bold conclusion that ―the Clinac linear accelerator
does not come from within [Claim 22‘s] scope,‖ Doc. No. 325 at ¶ 89-92, Varian offers no
competent evidence from which a reasonable fact finder could determine that the combination of
the RPM System and the Clinac or Trilogy Linear Accelerators, does not infringe Claim 22.
Because the RPM System satisfies each of the elements of Claim 20, the combination of the
RPM System and the Clinac and Trilogy Linear Accelerators infringes Claim 22 as a matter of
law.
D.
The Asserted Claims Are Not Invalid for Lack of Enablement
In its Motion for Summary Judgment, Varian argues that all of the asserted claims of the
‗554 Patent are invalid for lack of enablement because they improperly claim more than Pitt
invented. In support thereof, Varian contends that ―independent‖ Claim 20 covers embodiments
27
that determine patient movement from a single image of the patient, and that the ‗554 Patent
specification does not explain or teach how to determine movement from ―an image‖ (i.e., a
single image). Varian posits that Claim 20 is invalid in that it ―sweeps too broadly,
encompassing embodiments that do determine movement from only a single image in addition to
those that may also use other information.‖ (emphasis added). Varian further contends that
because Claim 20 is invalid for lack of enablement, the asserted ―dependent‖ claims are also
invalid. Thus, Varian argues that Claims 21-26, 28-32 and 36-38 of the ‗554 Patent all
incorporate independent Claim 20 by reference, either directly or indirectly, and therefore, all
dependent claims ―fall‖ with the independent one. In other words, Varian contends that Pitt‘s
asserted patent claims are invalid for lack of enablement because they do not teach how to detect
patient movement from a single frame of the video transmission generated by the camera of the
claimed apparatus.
Pitt strongly disputes Varian‘s contention, and notes that Varian concedes in its Brief,
that the claims do teach how to detect patient movement from multiple frames of the video
camera‘s output. Doc. No. 399 at 46, citing Doc. No. 365 at 51.
The parties agree that an enablement inquiry begins with claim construction. Varian then
asserts that for purposes of the ‗554 Patent, the word ―image‖ should be construed to mean either
a single frame or multiple frames from the video output of the camera used in the claim
apparatus. Doc. No. 365 at 52-53. In other words, Varian asks this Court to construe the word
―image‖ to refer to the medium in which an object is visually represented, rather than the subject
matter that is being depicted. This Court finds this argument to be unconvincing.
The plain meaning of the word, ―image,‖ is a visual representation of a physical object.
See e.g. ―Image,‖ Dictionary.com (accessed December 30, 2011) defining ―image‖ as ―a physical
28
likeness or representation of a person, animal, or thing, photographed, painted, sculptured, or
otherwise made visible.‖ Pitt argues, and this Court agrees, that the word ―image‖ connotes not
the medium of representation (photograph, video, painting, etc.), but rather, the content that is
depicted. Therefore, an ―image‖ of a patient, is a visual representation of the patient, in whatever
medium it is depicted. To wit: the ―image‖ is the visual representation of the patient.
Varian argues that its proposed construction of the word ―image‖ is ―reinforced by the
patent‘s use of the word‖ - - an argument which this Court also finds to be unpersuasive. The
‗554 Patent claims an apparatus that is ―responsive to movement of a patient.‖ The apparatus
has a ―camera means‖ that generates an ―image‖ – that is, the camera generates a visual
representation of a physical object. The ‘554 Patent also specifies the particular ―image,‖ that is
relevant to the claimed invention - - a patient. The ―image‖ of the patient is, by the very nature
of the claimed invention and the context of both claim language and the specification, a visual
representation of the patient that shows the patient‘s movement.
The ‗554 Patent consistently
uses the term ―image‖ in exactly that way to refer not to specific frames of the video camera‘s
output, but rather to a visual representation of a patient who (obviously) will be moving. The
‗554 Patent, therefore, teaches how to detect movement from that image.
In addition to the arguments regarding the plain meaning of the word ―image,‖ Varian
contends that the asserted claims of the ‗554 Patent are not enabled because, by claiming an
apparatus that can detect movement from ―an image of a patient,‖ (emphasis added) they
purportedly claim, but do not teach, that an apparatus can detect movement from a single video
frame as well as from multiple video frames. Varian offers no applicable case law to support
their contention that ―a‖ and ―an,‖ in patent parlance, can mean ―one or more.‖ Rather, the cited
case law seems to support Pitt‘s counter-argument that the words ―a‖ and ―an‖ in patent claims
29
are to be construed in context and in a manner which is consistent with the claim language and
specification. See e.g. Scanner Techs. Corp. v. ICOS Vision Sys. Corp., 365 F.3d 1299, 1305-06
(Fed. Cir. 2004) (construing ―a‖ and ―an‖ in context of claim language and specification); and
Elkay Mfg. Co. v. EBCO Mfg. Co., 192 F.3d 973, 977 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (―a‖ or ―an‖ can mean
―more than one‖ depending on the context in which the article is used).
The Court finds these arguments to be wholly unconvincing. First, as rehearsed, Varian‘s
construction of both the words ―image‖ and the preceding word ―an,‖ are not plausible.
Furthermore, the context of the ‗554 Patent makes it obvious that the patent is directed to an
apparatus that detects movement from a video image of a patient (not just a single snapshot from
the video image, but rather, it would have to be construed to refer to multiple frames of a video
transmission). It is the view of this Court, that these arguments do nothing to advance Varian‘s
burden of proving lack of enablement by ―clear and convincing evidence.‖ Furthermore, as
Pitt‘s expert witness on the issue of invalidity (Dr. Siochi) points out, he considered and rejected
this contention that the ―single image‖ issue renders the ‗554 invalid for lack of enablement, and
thus, his opinion by itself defeats Varian‘s Motion for Summary Judgment on this issue. Doc.
No. 400-17 at ¶ 10 (incorporating Validity Report at Doc. No. 320, ¶¶ 72-73). Accordingly,
Varian‘s Motion for Summary Judgment on the basis of invalidity for lack of enablement has
been denied.
E.
Varian‟s Non-Treatment RPMs Infringe the „554 Patent Under the Doctrine
of Equivalents.
The Court previously held, as set forth in fn. 2, hereinabove, that it would be unfair to
rule upon Varian‘s Motion for Summary Judgment regarding its belated defense of noninfringement on the basis of its new contentions regarding the ―capabilities‖ of its NonTreatment RPMs. Because of this ruling, the Court will not provide a lengthy analysis on this
30
issue, but does find, in any event, that Varian‘s Non-Treatment RPMs differ only insubstantially
from Pitt‘s patent claims, and therefore, the doctrine of equivalents is applicable.
The doctrine of equivalents, which was established by the Supreme Court of the United
States over 60 years ago in Graver Tank & Mfg. Co., Inc. v. Linde Air Prods. Co., 339 U.S. 605,
608 (1950), provides a scope of protection to a patent claim that exceeds its literal meaning to
―prevent an infringer from stealing the benefit of the invention.‖ As more fully discussed in the
Standard of Review (Section (IV)(A)(2)) above, the doctrine of equivalents is applicable, where,
as here, the accused device does not fall within the literal scope of a claim element as construed
by the Court, but instead includes a feature that differs insubstantially from the claim element.
Warner Jenkinson Co., Inc. v. Hilton Davis Chem. Co., 520 U.S. 17, 21 (1997).
The Court finds that the Non-Treatment RPMs meet all the elements of Claim 20: camera
means that captures and digitizes images of the patient, processing means, and the means
determining movement of the patient from the digital image signals, including movement
associated with breathing.
Varian argues that its Non-Treatment RPMs do not satisfy the ―gating means‖ element of
Claim 20, even when operated in the prospective gating mode. Varian argues that ―gating‖ in
Claim 20 requires one signal that causes the beam generator to turn on a radiation beam, and a
separate signal that causes the beam generator to turn the beam off, whereas the prospective
gating of Varian‘s Non-Treatment RPMs generates a single signal that causes the beam generator
(here a CT imager) to turn on and then turn off a radiation beam.
The claim construction of this Court, however, of ―gating signals‖ does not distinguish
between separate on/off signals, and a combined on/off signal. Furthermore, the Court finds that
31
any alleged difference between the two is insubstantial and therefore falls within the range of
equivalents of the ―gating means.‖
F.
Issues of Revenues (Damages) May Proceed To A Jury
Varian argues that the revenues from the linear accelerator must be excluded from the
royalty base under the Entire Market Value Rule and that the revenues from sales of the RPM
designed for use with PET and CT scanners must be excluded from the royalty base because that
RPM device does not infringe any asserted claims of the ‗554 Patent. The Court finds that the
first point should be argued before a jury, and the second point is really an attempt to re-argue
liability (which liability rulings have already been made against Varian). The Court will re-visit
this issue at the trial on damages during the motions in limine phase.
G.
The “Proposed Modification” to the RPM System Literally (And Under the
Doctrine of Equivalents) Infringes the „554 Patent
Varian next argues that a proposed modification to the RPM System warrants a summary
determination that, as a matter of law, it would avoid infringement of the ‗554 Patent literally
and/or under the doctrine of equivalents. Accepting as true all of Varian‘s factual assertions
regarding the nature and effect of the proposed modification, the Modified RPM System would
still infringe the ‗554 Patent both literally, and under the doctrine of equivalents.
In June of 2010, Varian made its first attempt to design around the ‗554 Patent, by
placing an optical filter on the lens of the RPM System‘s video camera. Doc. No. 401 at 66 and
36-37. The alleged purpose of the optical filter is to limit any images of the patient to a very
faint background. The focus, therefore, of the redesign was on Claim 20‘s camera means, which
―generate[es] digital image signals representative of an image of [the] patient.‖ The 2010
redesign project was abandoned, however, because Varian concluded that using an optical filter
alone would not satisfactorily achieve its objective of preventing the RPM camera from
32
generating an image of the patient at the same time ensuring that the RPM System functions.
Doc. No. 401, Statement of Additional Material Facts, at ¶ 9-11.
The latest ―proposed modification,‖ that is the subject of the current motion, is the result
of a development process that commenced in April 2011, and according to Pitt, was first
disclosed over five (5) months after the close of fact discovery (on April 28, 2011). Id. at
Statement of Additional Material Facts, at ¶ 12-13 (although Varian disputes that contention, the
conclusions of this Court in this regard moot the issue of requests for further discovery).
Varian claims that the redesigned RPM System differs from the current version in two
respects. Doc. No. 401 at ¶ 67. First, the ―camera of the RPM system as redesigned is equipped
with an optical glass filter that fits over the camera lens.‖ Id. at ¶ 68. As Pitt emphasizes, and
this Court agrees, this alleged ―fix‖ is very similar to the 2010 redesign listed above.
Importantly, Varian admits that the filter does not prevent the RPM camera from capturing or
generating a background image of the patient. Id. at ¶ 69.
Secondly, the RPM System modification includes ―a circuit board containing an analog
filter [that] is placed between the camera and the frame grabber, which digitizes the video signal
from the camera.‖ Id. at ¶ 70. Varian contends that the analog filter is a circuit which ―performs
a thresholding procedure on the analog video signal from the RPM camera and thereby
eliminates any remaining background image of the patient from the video signal, leaving only an
image of the reflective markers on the RPM marker block.‖ Id. at ¶ 71.
It is the view of this Court that the second component of the proposed redesign, like the
first component, does not fully achieve Varian‘s goal because the circuit board does not
necessarily prevent digitization of the background image of the patient. Rather, only if a
component of the circuit board (known as the potentiometer, which is an adjustable device) is set
33
to a particular threshold level, would it prevent digitization of the background image of the
patient.
Also, there is no universally ―correct‖ threshold setting, and the particular threshold
setting that would prevent the RPM System from generating and processing digital images of the
patient because of variables (including but not limited to conditions in the treatment room). Not
only does Varian admit that if the potentiometer is set to threshold levels lower than the ideal
setting the image of the patient may be digitized, but also it concedes that dialing the
potentiometer to its lowest setting will prevent the circuit board from performing its intended
function of preventing patient image digitization. Id., Statement of Additional Material Facts, at
¶ 19. Varian‘s own Rule 30(b)(6) witness testified that there may be circumstances under which
no threshold setting will prevent digitization of the patient image. Id., Statement of Additional
Material Facts, at ¶ 20. It appears then that Varian‘s primary defense to literal infringement is
that the modifications to the RPM System would not literally infringe if operated in a particular
way.
The asserted claims of the ‗554 Patent are apparatus claims rather than method claims.
Accordingly, the test for infringement is whether the RPM System is capable of functioning in a
way that would infringe the ‗554 Patent. It is well settled, and in fact, Varian noted its own
briefs on claim construction that ―Claim 20 is an apparatus claim . . . so the real issue is whether
the claimed apparatus is capable of using natural fiducials.‖ See Cyrix Corp. v. Intel Corp., 846
F.Supp. 522 536 (E.D. Tex. 1994), aff’d, 42 F.3d 1411 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (unpublished) (―To
infringe an apparatus claim, it is not necessary for an accused device actually to be performing
the functions specified by the claim. All that is required is that the device have the claimed
structure, and that this structure in the device have the capability of functioning as described by
the claim.‖).
34
The Court denies Varian‘s Motion for Summary Judgment as to non-infringement of the
proposed modification to the RPM System, because the proposed changes not only literally
infringe the ‗554 Patent as a matter of law, but also, the modified RPM System infringes the ‗554
Patent under the doctrine of equivalents.
As rehearsed, infringement under the doctrine of equivalents occurs if the difference
between the accused devices and the claim limitation are ―insubstantial,‖ meaning that ―the
element performs substantially the same function in substantially the same way to obtain
substantially the same result as the claim limitation.‖ Zelinski v. Brunswick Corp., 185 F.3d
1311, 1316-17 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citing Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Products Co., 339
U.S. 605, 608 (1950)).
No reasonable juror could find that the proposed modifications provide any functional or
technical changes. First, the optical filter proposed by Varian does not block the image of the
patient from being captured and generated by the RPM camera. Therefore, the modified system
is really no different than the current one, because both allow a faint image of the patient to pass
through the camera lens. Second, the analog circuit board is also purely cosmetic because the
only function it performs (preventing the image of the patient from being digitized) is redundant
and unnecessary to the operation of the RPM System. According to Varian, the software
currently used in the RPM System eliminates the patient image. See Doc. No. 401-1 at 12
(―Varian‘s RPM Respiratory Gating System does not use an image of the patient to determine
the patient‘s position; it only uses an image of retroreflective markers on a marker block. It uses
a simple thresholding step to eliminate all objects within the camera‘s field of view other than
the markers before any other processing of the image occurs‖). Preventing digitization of the
signals representing the image of the patient has no purpose if those signals will be eliminated
35
before further processing of the image regardless of whether they are digital or analog. The
RPM System ―as modified‖ performs substantially the same function in substantially the same
way to achieve substantially the same result as the ―camera means,‖ and ―processing means.‖
Furthermore, the ―two major functional differences‖ set forth by Varian are actually
irrelevant to infringement of Claim 20. First, Varian posits that the ‗554 Patent system can
determine patient motion based on natural marks on the patient‘s body, while the RPM [System]
as redesigned cannot.‖ Doc. No. 365 at 40. However, the fact that the modified RPM System,
would use only artificial fiducials (as opposed to natural fiducials) is irrelevant, because the
RPM System has always relied exclusively on artificial fiducials. Either way, this Court (as set
forth by the Special Master‘s Report and Recommendation on Claim Construction and affirmed
by this Court) has already ruled that the distinction between natural and artificial fiducials is
irrelevant to infringement under Claim 20 (because this Court founds that Claim 20 covers the
use of natural fiducials, artificial fiducials, or both). Doc. No. 283, at 14-15. Therefore, the fact
that the modified (or redesigned) RPM System uses only natural fiducials does nothing to
distinguish it from the current version of the system, which, as the Court has already held,
literally infringes Claim 20. Second, Varian claims that unlike ―the ‗554 system[]. . . the RPM
[System] as redesigned [cannot] . . . display an image of the patient on the same monitor as other
information related to patient motion.‖ The Court finds this distinction to be extraneous to the
issue of whether the RPM System infringes Claim 20. In contrast to dependent Claims 32, 36,
and 37, Claim 20 does not even mention, let alone require, the use of a monitor. Accordingly,
whether the RPM System displays an image of the patient on a single or multiple monitors, or no
monitor at all, is immaterial to the infringement analysis.
36
Finally, Varian‘s argument on equitable estoppel grounds is also unconvincing. Varian
argues that Pitt represented during the claim construction proceedings that Varian‘s proposed
modification to the RPM System would not infringe the ‗554 Patent, and that Varian redesigned
the RPM in reliance on that (mis)representation. According to Pitt, it acknowledged to the
Special Master (concerning a Finnish patent and the Peltola prior art) that the PTO found that it
did not invalidate the ‗554 Patent. Pitt distinguished the Peltola prior art from the patent-in-suit
by showing that Peltola used an optical filter which was placed on the camera lens that prevented
the camera from capturing an image of the patient, while the camera in the ‗554 Patent invention
had no optical filter, and therefore does capture an image of the patient. Consistent therewith,
Pitt acknowledged that if the RPM camera lens had an optical filter that prevented it from
generating an image of the patient, the RPM would not literally infringe Claim 20. Of course,
that does not address the separate question of whether it would still infringe under the doctrine of
equivalents - - which the Court has found that it does. In any event, the modified or redesigned
RPM System does not meet this criterion, because as Varian admits, the optical filter (unlike the
Peltola filter) does not prevent the camera from generating an image of the patient, albeit
allegedly a ―very faint‖ one. Doc. No. 401 at 38, ¶ 69.
Accordingly, with regard to the modified RPM System, Pitt has established infringement
under the doctrine of equivalents as a matter of law, and therefore, to the extent Pitt requests
additional discovery related to the redesign, said Motion is denied as moot.
H.
Issue of Willful Infringement May Proceed To A Jury
Varian now attempts to argue that Pitt‘s claim for willful infringement should not go to a
jury. This Court disagrees. According to the applicable legal standard (as set forth in the
Standard of Review Section (IV)(D)), willful infringement is established where the clear and
37
convincing evidence shows that: (1) ―the infringer acted despite an objectively high likelihood
that its actions constituted infringement of a valid patent,‖ and (2) ―this objectively-defined risk
was either known or so obvious that it should have been known to the accused infringer.‖ In re
Seagate Tech., LLC, 497 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2007). The Court must focus its inquiry on prelitigation conduct. Id. at 1373.
The Court finds that the following evidence is sufficient to allow this issue to be put
before a jury. First, Pitt shared its patent applications, and the concepts and technology
underlying them, with Varian assuming that Varian was to be a trusted business partner.
According to the deposition testimony of Dr. Greenberger, he stated: ―I am a representative of
the University of Pittsburgh, and I recall that I noticed Varian of the existence of these patents
[prior to the filing of the lawsuit]. I recall two separate times since the patents were issued that
Varian was looking at them.‖ Doc. No. 400-22 at p. 3-4. The deposition testimony of Dr.
Greenberger also presents facts that Varian took that information, ended its partnership with Pitt,
and eventually proceeded to develop the infringing products. Interestingly, Varian allegedly did
not seek advice of counsel to confirm that its products would not infringe its former partner‘s
patents. Only after its products were launched, did Varian approach Pitt with what could be
construed as a ―casual offer of nuisance value‖ payment in hopes of avoiding litigation.
The Court has already found that Varian‘s products employ the same technology and
concepts that Pitt shared with Varian during their partnership. There are facts from which a fact
finder could conclude that Varian knew of Pitt‘s application to patent that technology and further
knew that patents claiming that technology as Pitt‘s inventions had issued. These facts, and
those cited in the preceding paragraph establish an ―objectively high likelihood‖ that Varian‘s
development and launch of products using the same technology would infringe Pitt‘s patents.
38
The Court also finds Varian‘s arguments that because it has come forward with certain
defenses (including non-infringement and invalidity), it should be absolved of even the potential
for liability for willful infringement, to be unpersuasive. Varian cites a non-precedential opinion
of the Federal Circuit for the proposition that its ability to come up with non-infringement and
invalidity defenses in litigation shields it from its pre-litigation willful infringement. See Doc.
No. 365 at 45 (citing Black & Decker, Inc. v. Robert Bosch Tool Corp., 260 Fed. Appx. 284
(Fed. Cir. 2008). However, a careful reading of that opinion (although not binding authority)
reveals that it does not support Varian‘s position. Rather, the Federal Circuit simply declared the
issue of willfulness moot on appeal, and stated that if willfulness were considered again on
remand, the accused infringer‘s ―legitimate defense to infringement claims and credible
invalidity argument‖ would be probative of an ―objectively high likelihood‖ that the defendant‘s
activity would not infringe.
In i4i Ltd P’ship v. Microsoft Corp., 670 F.Supp.2d 568, 581 (E.D. Tex. 2009), aff’d on
other grounds, 589 F.3d 1246 (Fed. Cir. 2009), the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Texas rejected the same argument that Varian advances, that the presentation of valid
defenses in litigation immunizes the infringer from a willfulness finding. The Court found that
the defendant‘s argument in that regard was ―premised on an overly broad reading of Seagate,‖
and a misreading of Black & Decker. Id. at 580. The Court stated the following, which is
equally applicable here, and bears repeating:
[T]he number of creative defenses that [defendant] is able to muster in an
infringement action after years of litigation and substantial discovery is
irrelevant to the objective prong of the Seagate analysis. Rather, the correct
analysis focuses on whether, given the facts and circumstances prior to
Microsoft‘s infringing actions, a reasonable person would have appreciated a
high likelihood that acting would infringe a valid patent . . . .The subject prong
39
then focuses on whether [defendant] knew or should have known of that
likelihood.
Id. at 581-582.
Varian‘s argument that the jury should be prohibited from determining willfulness goes
beyond even what defendant did in i4i. In i4i, the defendant moved for judgment as a matter of
law after the jury heard the evidence of willfulness. Whereas, here Varian seeks the Court to
usurp the function of the jury - - which this Court will not do.
Furthermore, despite Varian‘s argument that the PTO granted Varian‘s request for
reexamination of the patents in suit, this does not insulate Varian from potential liability for its
willful infringement. See Krippelz v. Ford Motor Co., 636 F.Supp.2d 669, 671 (N.D. Ill. 2009)
(the granting of a reexamination request ―cannot be considered to have decreased the objective
likelihood that [the defendant] was infringing a valid patent.‖) Indeed, the Federal Circuit has
ruled that reexamination grants and interim PTO rejections are ―not probative evidence on the
question of patentability.‖
The Court, as a matter of law, rules on the existing record that Varian‘s reliance on its
alleged non-infringement, and its reliance on the other non-liability issues and defenses raised by
Varian were not reasonable, and was objectively reckless. Pitt has proven, as a matter of law, by
clear and convincing evidence that the objective prong of Seagate is met as to the legal issues.
See Powell v. Home Depot, ___ F.3d ___, 100 U.S.P.Q.2d 1742, 1751-1752, and fn. 1 2011 WL
5519820 (Fed. Cir. November 14, 2011).
Simply put, Pitt has put forth sufficient evidence of willfulness to avoid summary
judgment, and this issue is best resolved by a jury. See Sollami Co. v. Kennametal. Inc., 2007
WL 6137395 at *11 (W.D. Pa. December 28, 2007)(This Court found sufficient evidence of
40
willfulness to avoid summary judgment, without making ultimate determination as to whether
non-movant had ―adduced ‗clear and convincing‘ evidence‖). Therefore, defendant‘s Motion for
Summary Judgment as to willfulness has been denied. See Doc. No. 425.
VI.
Conclusion
After careful consideration of this most voluminous record, the Court finds that the RPM
System infringes Pitt‘s ‗554 Patent as a matter of law, and therefore, has GRANTED Pitt‘s
partial Motion for Summary Judgment. The Court has also DENIED Varian‘s Motion for
Summary Judgment in its entirety. Finally, as set forth hereinabove, the Court will conduct a
trial on the issue of willfulness only (as previously set forth by Order of December 21, 2011 –
see doc. nos. 425 and 426).
An appropriate Order (issued on December 21, 2011 at doc. no. 425) has been filed.
SO ORDERED this 30th day of December, 2011.
s/Arthur J. Schwab
Arthur J. Schwab
United States District Judge
cc: All Registered ECF Counsel and Parties
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