Golden Hour Data Systems, Inc. v. emsCharts, Inc. et al
Filing
386
MEMORANDUM AND OPINION - the Court finds emsCharts has not demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that the applicants of the 073 patent or their prosecution counsel engaged in inequitable conduct during the prosecution of the 073 patent. Accordingly, the 073 patent is not rendered unenforceable on this ground, and judgment shall be entered in favor of Golden Hour, and against emsCharts on the issue of inequitable conduct. Signed by Judge Rodney Gilstrap on 8/15/12. (ehs, )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
MARSHALL DIVISION
GOLDEN HOUR DATA SYSTEMS,
INC.
Plaintiff,
V.
EMSCHARTS, INC., ET AL.
Defendants.
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CAUSE NO. 2:06-CV-381-JRG
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
I.
INTRODUCTION
The Court conducted a jury trial in November, 2008. In that trial, the jury rendered a
verdict that Defendant emsCharts, Inc. (“emsCharts”) willfully infringed all the asserted patent
claims and awarded $3,500,000 to Plaintiff Golden Hour Data Systems, Inc. (“Golden Hour”).
See Dkt. No. 202 (Jury Verdict). Importantly, the jury explicitly found that all the asserted
patent claims were not invalid by reason of anticipation or obviousness in view of any of the art
presented at trial, including the AeroMed Brochure. See id. (Jury Verdict affirming validity of
claims 1, 6-8, 10, and 12-22 of United States Patent No. 6,117,073 (“the ′073 patent”)).
However, the Court subsequently granted Judgment as a Matter of Law (“JMOL”) that, among
other things, the ′073 patent was unenforceable due to inequitable conduct committed during its
prosecution before the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”). See Dkt. Nos. 284
(Inequitable Conduct Order)(Ward, J.). In reaching this finding, the Court applied the preTherasense inequitable conduct standard that imposed a lower standard, requiring the Court to
balance intent against materiality. Id. at pg. 15 (“Having found that the threshold levels of
materiality and intent are satisfied, the court balances the high level of materiality with evidence
of deceptive intent and concludes that Golden Hour committed inequitable conduct.”)
1
On Aug. 9, 2010, the Federal Circuit, continuing to apply the pre-Therasense inequitable
conduct standard, affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for further factual findings on
what was intended by the Information Disclosure Statement (“IDS”) filed in the ‘073 patent
application that identified the AeroMed Software System to the PTO but did not include a copy of
the brochure itself. Golden Hour Data Sys., Inc. v. emsCharts, Inc., 614 F.3d 1367, 1379 (Fed.
Cir. 2010), reh’ng and reh’ng en banc denied (Nov. 24, 2010.)
On May 25, 2011, before further findings could be made by this Court, the Federal
Circuit issued its en banc Therasense decision that fundamentally changed the law of inequitable
conduct. This development effectively set aside the prior inequitable conduct decision and
analysis in this case. Therasense v. Becton, Dickinson & Co., 649 F.3d 1276 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (en
banc)(hereafter “Therasense”). On September 16, 2011, the Court held that Therasense created a
standard contrary to the law previously applied in this case—particularly with respect to the issue
of materiality. Dkt. No. 313. As a result, the Court found it appropriate to re-analyze the
inequitable conduct issues under the new standard in Therasense. On May 11, 2012, the Court
held a bench trial to retry emsCharts’ inequitable conduct allegations consistent with Therasense.
Pursuant to such bench trial, the Court now makes and enters the following findings of
fact and conclusions of law relating to the bench trial held on May 11, 2012:
II.
FINDINGS OF FACT
A. The Original Examination of The ′073 Patent
1. Golden Hour's ′073 patent, entitled “Integrated Emergency Medical Transportation Database
System” is directed to computerized systems and methods for information management
services in connection with emergency medical transport, which is often performed by
helicopter. (PX 1).
2. Providers of such emergency medical transportation must collect and track large amounts of
data for the purposes of dispatching transport, treating patients (clinical services), and also
for billing. (PX 1).
2
3. The systems of the ′073 patent provide for the integration of dispatch, clinical services, and
billing data. (PX 1).
4. The ′073 patent discloses a dispatch module, a clinical module, an administration module,
and a billing module. (PX 1).
5. By integrating recordkeeping, these systems seek to avoid redundancy in the same. (PX 1).
6. The final sentence of the “Background of the Invention” section of the ′073 patent
summarizes a basic concept of the invention: “what is needed is a comprehensive system that
includes modules for dispatching emergency medical teams, tracking their movement to and
from the accident scene, managing a clinical diagnosis and treatment and accurately billing
the patient for the services rendered.” (PX 1, ′073 patent col.1 l.66-col.2 l.3).
7. Claims 1, 6-8, 10, and 12-14 are apparatus claims; claims 15-22 are method claims. (PX 1).
8. Claims 1, 10, and 15 are independent claims. (PX 1).
9. Claim 1 requires integrating dispatch and billing data. It provides:
1. A computerized integrated data management system for tracking a patient
incident, comprising:
a first module capable of dispatching an emergency transport crew specific to a
patient incident requiring emergency medical care by the emergency transport
crew, wherein transportation tracking information relating to the dispatch is
recorded; and
a second module capable of receiving information from the first module and
billing the patient appropriately for costs indicative of the patient incident,
including transportation costs.
(PX 1, col.20 l.61-col.21 l.4).
10. Claim 15 requires integrating dispatch and clinical services data. It provides:
15. A computerized method of generating a patient encounter record, comprising
the steps of:
collecting flight information relating to an emergency transport crew dispatch;
collecting patient information from a clinical encounter associated with a patient
incident requiring emergency medical care by the emergency transport crew; and
integrating the patient information with the flight information to produce an
encounter record indicative of the patient's clinical encounter.
(PX 1, col.21 l.54-col.22 l.6).
3
11. In July of 1997, Dr. Kevin Hutton (“Dr. Hutton”) engaged the Knobbe Martens Olson &
Bear LLP law firm (“Knobbe Martens”) to assist in the prosecution of the patent application
that led to the ’073 patent. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 121:20-23).
12. The application leading to the ′073 patent was filed on March 2, 1998. (PX 1).
13. Dr. Hutton and Dr. Scott Jones (“Dr. Jones”) were the named inventors. (PX 1).
14. Michael Fuller (“Fuller”), a senior patent agent, and John M. Carson (“Carson”), a partner
who supervised his work, prepared, filed, and prosecuted the patent application with the
knowledge and assistance of Dr. Hutton and Dr. Jones. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 37:9-18; 129:17130:6).
15. At the time of the filing of the application, Dr. Hutton informed his patent attorneys that Air
Medical Software (“the AeroMed Software System”) was the system most similar to the
subject matter of the application. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 130:22-131:4).
16. The “Description of the Related Technology” section of the ′073 patent specification
discusses the AeroMed Software System. The specification provides:
Current documentation procedures in the air medical transport industry are based
on an inefficient paper and pencil technology....
....
The fragmentation throughout the medical transport environment is also evident
in the myriad of entities throughout the country practicing different standards of
care and documentation.... This is especially evident when certain aspects of the
system (such as computerized clinical laboratory result displays) have been
upgraded with a uniquely tailored computerized system, while the remaining
functions are still performed in an archaic manner. While the upgraded system
may be effective for one singular aspect, such as dispatching, lab reporting, or
chart dictating, the remainder of the system does not improve its effectiveness due
to the other archaic components.
Although others have attempted to remedy this conflict, no fully integrated
medical systems have been developed. For example, the Air Medical Software
(Innovative Engineering of Lebanon, N.H.) provides computer software for
dispatching emergency crews to accident scenes and managing flight information.
However, it does not provide comprehensive integration of the flight information
with a clinical diagnosis, billing system and administration system.
(PX 1, col.1 ll.11-57).
4
17. On August, 4, 19
A
998, during prosecution of the ′073 patent, Full submitted an Inform
ler
mation
Discl
losure Statem
ment (“the IDS”) furthe describing the AeroM Software System. (P 3,
I
er
g
Med
e
PX
5/11/ IC Trans. 65:12-20).
/12
18. In the IDS, Fuller stated: “Ap
e
r
pplicants are aware of A
e
AeroMed Sof
ftware, comp
puter softwar for
re
Air Medical Dispatch, Flight Progra
D
am Manage
ement, Med
dical Chart
ting, Contin
nuing
Education Tracki
ing, Transfe Center, Ph
er
hysician's R
Referral Line and Custo Applicat
es,
om
tions.
AeroM Softwa is a prod
Med
are
duct of Inno
ovative Eng ineering of Lebanon, N
New Hampsh
hire.”
(PX 3, pp. 100-10
3
01).
19. The patent applic
p
cation includ 27 claim (PX 3, pp 68-70).
ded
ms.
p.
20. All claims were allowed and the ′073 patent issued on Septem
c
d
d
mber 12, 2000. (PX 1, 3 pp.
3,
122, 124).
B. The Re-E
B
Examination of The ′07 Patent
n
73
21. After this Court’ original decision on inequitable conduct, on May 7, 20
r
’s
d
i
n
009, a third party
sough reexamination of the ‘073 Paten based on the material produced in this litig
ht
nt
ls
gation
relati to the AeroMed Sof
ing
A
ftware Syste including the user m
em,
g
manual know as the F
wn
Flight
Mana
agement Mo
odule version 2.2. (PX 206, pgs. 263 292).1
n
322. On June 10, 200 the PTO ordered re
J
09,
O
eexamination of the ‘07 patent, a as part o its
n
73
and
of
review the PTO considered the entire liti
w,
c
t
igation file o this case a shown bel
of
as
low:
(PX 206, pg. 192).
,
1
This Court tak judicial notice under Fed
kes
deral Rule of E
Evidence 201 o the proceed
of
dings held befo the
ore
ates
ice
N
0,531, which w the reexami
was
ination of the ‘073 Patent.
United Sta Patent Offi for Serial Number 90/010
5
23. On November 2, 2009, Golden Hour submitted the prior art included in emsCharts’
preliminary invalidity contention including comprehensive operation manuals for the
AeroMed Software System called the Flight Management Module version 2.2 (“FMM”) and
Dispatch Module version 2.2 (“DM”). (PX 206, pgs. 156-162).
24. In addition to the FMM and DM that the described the AeroMed Software System in detail,
the AeroMed Brochure was also before the PTO during the ‘073 reexamination. First, the
entire litigation file of this case was cited to the PTO, and the PTO confirmed that it had
reviewed the entire litigation file.
(PX 206, pg. 192) The litigation file included the
inequitable conduct order that had reproduced within it a complete copy of the AeroMed
Brochure. See Dkt. No. 284 (Inequitable Conduct Order); Golden Hour Data Systems, Inc. v.
emsCharts, Inc., et al., No. 2:06 CV 381, 2009 WL 781334 (E.D. Tex. Mar. 23, 2009)
(same); Golden Hour Data Systems, Inc. v. emsCharts, Inc., 91 USPQ2d 1556, 1560-1561
(the official publication of the Order in the United States Patent Quarterly) (same), each of
which included a complete copy of the entire AeroMed Brochure as shown below:
6
f
o
p
amination in
ndividually c
cites the Inequitable Con
nduct
25. The file-history of the ‘073 patent reexa
Order (Dkt. No. 284) that had reprod
r
.
duced within it a comp
n
plete copy of the Aero
oMed
Broch
hure. (PX 206, pgs. 44 49, 52, 60
2
4,
0-69 (Inequi
itable Condu Order), 97-120, 604
uct
4-29).
Acco
ordingly, the Court finds that the PT reviewed the AeroM Brochure during the ‘073
s
TO
d
Med
e
reexa
amination. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 182:4
T
4-184:22).
26. With the primary source doc
y
cuments of the FMM an DM of re
t
nd
ecord and w notice of this
with
Court previous rulings inco
t’s
orporating th entire Ae
he
eroMed Broc
chure, the PTO issued a first
7
office action on February 22, 2010 rejecting all of the ‘073 patent claims based on the FMM,
the testimony of Mr. Charles Freeman, and other cited art. (PX 206, pgs. 140-148).
27. On March 29, 2010, Golden Hour responded arguing that the FMM: (1) was not a prior
publication; (2) did not enable the claimed invention; and (3) did not disclose or suggest all
the elements of the claims. (PX 206, pgs. 95-125).
28. On June 8, 2010, the PTO agreed with Golden Hour and affirmed the validity of all the ‘073
Patent claims in light of the FMM and DM, holding:
First, the examiner agrees that the burden of proof has not been met by Requester
regarding the availability of the Flight Management Module version 2.2
(henceforth FMM) as prior art. Specifically, after the examiner read the complete
deposition of Charles Freeman, there is no evidence that the document was in the
public domain. Mr. Freeman could not definitively state when the FMM was
provided to the clients and took great pains to prevent its reproduction by others.
As noted in the deposition and pointed out by Patent Owner on page 10 of the
response, Mr. Freeman states only that it ‘would’ have been distributed which
indicates that he had no specific recollection of its actual distribution. Also, he
tried to prevent others other than client from viewing the materials and discussed
on pages 12-13 of Requester's response. The remaining testimony provided in the
deposition provides no additional insight as to FMM's actual distribution. Further,
there is no evidence that the document was ever copyrighted as indicated by Mr.
Freeman. Mr. Freeman is not a disinterested third party and clearly seeks to
prevent his work from being duplicated. This position is supported, by the
deposition and the ‘copyright notice’ on page i-2 of the FMM. Given the
evidence provided by Requester and the arguments submitted by Patent Owner,
the examiner cannot agree at this time that FMM was available as prior art; and
therefore, as all of the rejections proposed by Requester are based on FMM, the
rejections are withdrawn and the claims are confirmed over the prior art cited for
use in rejections by Requester.
Further, the examiner concurs that FMM is non-enabling. The declaration by Mr.
Hutton (with the accompanying court ruling) has been considered and found
persuasive along with the arguments set forth by Patent Owner found on pages
14-19 of Requester's response incorporated herein by reference.
Finally with regard to the various rejection based arguments, and specifically with
respect to the independent claims, the following Requester's points have been
found persuasive. With regard to claim 1, the examiner concurs that while it is
called a dispatching module, a separate program, not discussed in FMM handles
the dispatching as noted on page 2-1 (see also Requester's argument in section (1)
on page 21 of Requester's response, incorporated herein by reference). Therefore,
as it is unknown what actually dispatches the crew (i.e. a person, other program,
etc), the claimed limitation is not met. With regard to independent claim 10, it is
8
agreed that FMM does not teach the limitation of determining a diagnosis as
required by the claim. The passages cited by Requester, upon further review, only
appear to give menus to help the user diagnose the problem and does not actually
diagnose the issue based on input.
For the above reasons, claims 1-27 are confirmed as all of the rejections made by
the examiner/Requester proposed rejections have been overcome.
(PX 206, pgs. 7-8).
29. The PTO was persuaded on all of these bases independently, finding that the AeroMed
Software System as described by all the information gained through this litigation (and
submitted in support of emsCharts’ inequitable conduct claim) failed to anticipate all the
elements of any of the claims of the ‘073 patent. (PX 206, pgs. 7-9).
30. The AeroMed Software System, as described in the 178-page FMM, the 150-page DM, and
the two-page AeroMed Brochure, is not but-for material to the claims of the ‘073 patent even
if those references were considered publicly-available prior art publications. (PX 206, pgs.
7-9).
C. The ‘073 Patent Claims Would Have Been Allowed Over The AeroMed Website
31. emsCharts also suggested the AeroMed Website, which purportedly captured by the archives
of the online Wayback Machine in February, 1998, may serve as other possible evidence of
prior on sale or public use of the AeroMed Software System. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 134:4135:15; DX1024, pgs. 087-091, 421-422).
32. The information regarding the features of the AeroMed Software System shown on the
website pages purportedly archived by the Wayback Machine is substantively no different
than the information in the AeroMed Brochure, which did not anticipate all the elements of
any of the claims of the ‘073 patent in the reexamination. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 197:9-198:1;
212:7-15; Compare, DX482, DX1024, pgs. 087-091, 421-422; See also, PX 206, pgs.7-9).
33. If the PTO had been provided with the AeroMed Brochure during the original prosecution of
the ‘073 patent application, and if this had led the examiner to discover the AeroMed Website
as purportedly shown in the archives of the Wayback Machine, there is no basis to conclude
that the outcome would have been different than in the ‘073 reexamination, where all the
9
claims were found to be not anticipated by the AeroMed Software System as described in the
FMM, DM, and the AeroMed Brochure that is substantively identical to the AeroMed
Website.
34. In the ‘073 Reexamination, the PTO found the ‘073 claims patentable over the AeroMed
Brochure and the AeroMed Software System even when it was disclosed in the detailed nonpublic FMM and DM user manuals and supported by Freeman’s testimony. (PX 206, pgs. 79)
35. The AeroMed Brochure is a secondary source of information that promotes the primary
source, namely the FMM and DM. (11/21/2008 PM Jury Trial Trans. 58:4-25; 88:23-89:20;
90:14-16; 99:1-113:22).
36. In the ‘073 Reexamination, the PTO found the ‘073 claims patentable over the AeroMed
Brochure and the AeroMed Software System because, among other reasons, even the detailed
non-public user manuals did not enable the software. (PX 206, pgs.7-9)
37. In the ‘073 Reexamination the PTO found the ‘073 claims patentable over the AeroMed
Brochure and the AeroMed Software System because, among other reasons, even the detailed
non-public user manuals did not disclose a system that included all the elements of any of the
‘073 claims. (PX 206, pgs. 7-9)
38. If during the original examination of the ‘073 patent, the PTO had been provided only the
then-publicly available documents and information regarding the AeroMed Software System,
the PTO would have had even less information regarding the software than it had during the
‘073 Reexamination. (PX 206, pgs. 7-9 (finding that the user manuals were not publicly
available.))
39. Since the PTO found the ‘073 claims patentable over the AeroMed Brochure and the
AeroMed Software System when provided with more information and detailed documents
than were publicly available during the original prosecution of the ‘073 patent, it is
reasonable to conclude that the PTO would have found the ‘073 claims patentable over the
AeroMed Brochure and the AeroMed Software System when provided with only the very
10
limited information that was publicly available during the original prosecution of the ‘073
patent. (PX 206, pgs. 7-9).
40. emsCharts has not shown by clear and convincing evidence that the AeroMed Software
System would have been but-for material to the claims of the ‘073 patent, i.e., that the claims
of the ‘073 patent would not have been allowed if the examiner had been provided with all
the publicly-available documents and information regarding the AeroMed Brochure during
the original prosecution of the ‘073 patent.
D. Applicants Accurately Stated Their Understanding Of The AeroMed Software
System To The PTO In Good Faith As Supported By Credible Testimony And
Evidence
41. There is insufficient evidence to show that either Dr. Hutton or Dr. Jones or their lawyers that
prosecuted the ‘073 patent had ever seen any version of the AeroMed Software System, or
had any firsthand knowledge of the functions or capabilities of any version of the AeroMed
Software System, prior to issuance of the ‘073 patent. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 76:13-77:3; 82:2283:24).
42. emsCharts never alleged that Golden Hour knew of or possessed either the FMM or DM user
manuals during the original prosecution of the ‘073 Patent.
43. Dr. Hutton was aware since around the 1991 or 1992 timeframe that AeroMed Software
System was being used by emergency transport providers in the United States. (5/11/12 IC
Trans. 129:4-8).
44. In December 1996, Dr. Hutton wrote that the AeroMed Software System owners, Innovative
Engineering, charged users $10,000 for the AeroMed Software System. (5/11/12 IC Trans.
131:5-9).
45. In December 1996, Dr. Hutton wrote that the AeroMed Software System included two
modules: dispatch and clinical documentation. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 131:5-12).
46. In December 1996 Dr. Hutton wrote that updates to the AeroMed Software System were not
provided over the Internet, but by a bulletin board service. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 132:21-133:1).
11
47. The Internet archive “Wayback Machine” has indicated that the AeroMed Software System
had published a web page stating that AeroMed discontinued their bulletin board service in
1999, after the ‘073 patent application was filed. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 134:4-136:4).
48. Dr. Hutton understood that the AeroMed Software System was in use by others in the United
States when the '073 patent application was filed in March of 1998. (5/11/12 IC Trans.
129:12-16).
49. At the time of the filing of the ‘073 patent application, Dr. Hutton informed his patent
attorneys that the AeroMed Software System of Innovative Engineering of Lebanon, New
Hampshire was, to his knowledge, the only similar information management product in the
market. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 130:22-131:4).
50. At the time of the filing of the ‘073 patent application, Dr. Hutton’s understanding of the
AeroMed Software System was secondhand, based on the statements of third party users.
(5/11/12 IC Trans. 137:19-138:6).
51. In 1997, Dr. Hutton understood that the AeroMed Software System had a text-based clinical
software module, but that it was not commercially functional, such that most users preferred
to use handwritten records and abstraction to perform data analysis and billing manually by
hand. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 146:25-149:1).
52. Prior to issuance of the ‘073 patent, and continuing through the May 11, 2012 hearing in this
case, Dr. Hutton did not know what integration the AeroMed Software System had. (5/11/12
IC Trans. 138:20-139:3). Dr. Hutton believed it had some integration, but that it did not
integrate truly with a clinical system. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 138:20-139:15).
53. Prior to issuance of the ‘073 patent, Dr. Hutton’s understanding of the AeroMed Software
System is that it did not have integrated billing capacity. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 139:16-146:24).
54. Dr. Hutton conveyed his understanding of the AeroMed Software System to his patent
prosecution lawyers before the ‘073 patent issued. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 130:22-131:4; 138:2024).
12
55. There is insufficient evidence that either Dr. Hutton or Dr. Jones or their lawyers that
prosecuted the ‘073 patent have ever seen any version of the AeroMed Software System, or
have any firsthand knowledge of the functions or capabilities of any version of the AeroMed
Software System. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 76:13-77:3; 82:22-83:24).
E. Applicants’ Treatment Of The AeroMed Brochure Was In Good Faith As
Supported By Credible Testimony And Evidence
56. The AeroMed Brochure is an undated marketing brochure that advertised features of some
version of the AeroMed Software System. (DX 482)
57. Dr. Hutton did not have the AeroMed Brochure at the time that the ‘073 patent application
was filed on March 2, 1998. Dr. Hutton first obtained the AeroMed Brochure about three
weeks later, at the 1998 Air Medical Transport Midyear Conference. (5/11/12 IC Trans.
124:22-127:6).
58. Dr. Hutton provided the AeroMed Brochure to his patent prosecution counsel sometime
before August 4, 1998. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 65:12-66:18; 69:1-69:24; 79:12-20; DX2, pgs. 7071).
59. The inside of the AeroMed Brochure described an unidentified version of the AeroMed
Software System that had a dispatch module “that is a integrated real-time flight dispatching
program” combined with medical charting and claimed “Billing becomes a breeze with the
user definable reports.” (DX 482).
60. The AeroMed Brochure stated that “[t]he AMS Dispatch Module can be used with the Flight
Management Module....” (DX 482).
61. The AeroMed Brochure advertised “[a] fast, easy way to create flight plans, cost quotes,
track aircraft. No-nonsense medical charting. Billing.” (DX 482).
62. The AeroMed Brochure stated that “[t]he Flight Management Module is a companion to the
Dispatch Module. All information entered by the Dispatch Module is combined into Flight
Management so that duplicate data entry is eliminated.” (DX 482).
13
63. Having received the AeroMed Brochure after the ‘073 patent application was filed,
prosecution counsel prepared an Information Disclosure Statement (“the IDS”) and filed it on
August 4, 1998. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 65:12-66:18; 69:1-69:24; DX 2, pgs. 70-71).
64. In the IDS prosecution, counsel copied the information on the front of the AeroMed Brochure
and submitted that to the PTO instead of the Brochure itself. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 92:6-93:23;
118:7-119:10).
65. Prosecution counsel had made it his practice not to submit undated documents. (5/11/12 IC
Trans. 56:4-57:12).
66. Prosecution counsel did not read the entire AeroMed Brochure but merely glanced through it
for a date. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 99:13-21).
67. Prosecution counsel believed that the idea of the IDS was to identify to the Examiner that the
applicant was aware of the identified software, so that the examiner could search for
corresponding prior art versions of the software, if any. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 92:6-94:22).
68. Prosecution counsel chose to copy only the front of the brochure because he assumed that the
features listed on the front of the AeroMed Brochure were the things that AeroMed likely
believed were the most important features of their software. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 92:6-94:22).
69. The description of the AeroMed Software System in the IDS is identical with what is set forth
on the front cover of the AeroMed Brochure (with the exception of the word “Centers” being
plural in the brochure). (DX 2, pgs. 70-71).
70. The IDS did not disclose the reference to “billing” described inside the brochure. (DX 2,
pgs. 70-71).
71. At no time during the original prosecution of the ‘073 patent application was the AeroMed
Brochure itself, or its reference to “billing,” provided to the examiner. (DX 2).
72. Prosecution counsel provided a plausible explanation establishing why he did not submit a
copy of the actual AeroMed Brochure to the PTO.
14
73. When prosecution counsel generated the ‘073 patent application, he was a patent agent who
had been employed with Knobbe Martens for seven years and was in his last semester of law
school at the University of San Diego School of Law. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 117:11-23).
74. During the original prosecution of the ‘073 patent application, Golden Hour was a small and
new client for Knobbe Martens, which was then an approximately 300-attorney IP firm.
(5/11/12 IC Trans. 95:25-96:6; 109:10-110:4).
75. Prosecution counsel had insufficient motivation to intentionally deceive the patent office
during prosecution of the ‘073 patent. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 109:10-110:17).
76. Prosecution counsel provided credible testimony that they did not intentionally deceive the
patent office during prosecution of the ‘073 patent. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 109:10-110:17).
77. Dr. Hutton believes that the AeroMed Brochure does not contradict the statement in the
specification that the AeroMed Software System “does not provide comprehensive integration
of the flight information with a clinical diagnosis, billing system and administration
system[,]” (PX 1, col.1 ll.54-57), because, among other reasons, Dr. Hutton reads the
AeroMed Brochure as indicating that that version of the AeroMed Software System did not
include a billing system. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 167:15-169:9).
78. Dr. Hutton reads the AeroMed Brochure as indicating that that version of the AeroMed
Software System did not include a billing system because the AeroMed Brochure references
tracking time, and medical billing is not based on time. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 167:15-168:3).
79. Dr. Hutton reads the AeroMed Brochure as indicating that that version of the AeroMed
Software System did not include a billing system because the reports listed in the AeroMed
Brochure did not include a charge sheet or any other type of output that would be necessary
to be able to bill. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 167:15-168:9).
80. Dr. Hutton reads the AeroMed Brochure as indicating that that version of the AeroMed
Software System did not include a billing system because Dr. Ira Blumen, an early used of the
AeroMed Software System, had told Dr. Hutton that the owner and programmer of the
15
AeroMed Software System – Mr. Freeman – did not know anything about billing, and that he
had never heard that AeroMed had a billing system. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 168:17-23).
81. Dr. Hutton provided credible testimony that he did not intentionally deceive the patent office
during prosecution of the ‘073 patent.
82. The record does not contain clear and convincing evidence that the applicants or their
prosecution counsel intentionally failed to disclose information known to them to be but-for
material to the PTO in connection with the prosecution of the ‘073 patent.
83. The record does not contain clear and convincing evidence that the applicants or their
prosecution counsel submitted false information to the PTO with the specific intention to
deceive the PTO in connection with the prosecution of the ‘073 patent.
84. emsCharts has not proven by clear and convincing evidence that the applicants or their
prosecution counsel intentionally failed to disclose information known to them to be but-for
material to the PTO in connection with the prosecution of the ‘073 patent.
85. emsCharts has not proven by clear and convincing evidence that the applicants or their
prosecution counsel submitted false information to the PTO with the specific intention to
deceive the PTO in connection with the prosecution of the ‘073 patent.
III.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
A. Jurisdiction
1. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and
1338(a).
2. This action arises under the Patent Laws of the United States, 35 U.S.C. § 1, et seq.
3. emsCharts’ counterclaims arise under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and
2202, and the Patent Laws of the United States, 35 U.S.C. § 1, et seq.
4. Because this action arises under the Patent Laws, the Court must apply the precedents of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which has jurisdiction over any
appeal of this judgment. 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a).
16
5. The question of inequitable conduct can be severed for trial by the court. Agfa Corp. v. Creo
Prods. Inc., 451 F.3d 1366, 1371–75 (Fed. Cir. 2006). Here, the Federal Circuit directed this
Court to conduct further factual findings on emsCharts’ allegations of inequitable conduct.
Golden Hour Data Sys., Inc. v. emsCharts, Inc., 614 F.3d 1367, 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2010),
reh’ng and reh’ng en banc denied (Nov. 24, 2010.)
Subsequently the Federal Circuit
decided Therasense, requiring this Court to completely revisit the inequitable conduct issue
in this case. Dkt No. 313.
B. Applicable Standard Post-Therasense: A Finding Of Inequitable Conduct
Requires A Showing By Clear And Convincing Evidence That Both The
Withheld Reference Is “But For” Material, And Separately, That The
“Applicant Knew Of The Reference, Knew It Was Material, And Made A
Deliberate Decision To Withhold It.”
6. A finding of inequitable conduct may result if a patent applicant breaches the duty to
prosecute a patent application in good faith and with candor. See 37 C.F.R. § 1.56; Purdue
Pharma L.P. v. Endo Pharm. Inc., 438 F.3d 1123, 1128 (Fed. Cir. 2006). See generally,
Therasense, Inc. v. Becton, Dickinson & Co., 649 F.3d 1276, 1287-92 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (en
banc).
7. After Therasense, “[t]o prove inequitable conduct, the accused infringer must provide
evidence that the applicant (1) misrepresented or omitted [but-for] material information, and
(2) did so with specific intent to deceive the PTO.” Am. Calcar, Inc. v. Am. Honda Motor
Co., 651 F.3d 1318, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (citing Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1287).
8. The accused infringer must prove both but-for materiality and intent by clear and convincing
evidence. Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1287; Nilssen v. Osram Sylvania, Inc., 504 F.3d 1223,
1229 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (quoting Honeywell Int'l Inc. v. Universal Avionics Sys. Corp., 488
F.3d 982, 999 (Fed. Cir. 2007)).
9. Clear and convincing evidence is that “weight of proof which produces in the mind of the
trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations sought to be
established, evidence so clear, direct and weighty and convincing as to enable the fact finder
17
to come to a clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the truth of the precise facts of the case.”
In re Medrano, 956 F. 2d 101, 102 (5th Cir. 1992) (internal quotations omitted) quoting
Cruzan by Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dept. of Health, 497 U.S. 261, 110 S.Ct. 2841, 2855
n. 11, 111 L.Ed.2d 224 (1990); Matter of Jaques, 972 F.Supp. 1070, 1079 (E.D.Tex.,1997).
10. As to proving materiality, “as a general matter, the materiality required to establish
inequitable conduct is but-for materiality.” Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1291. Stated another
way, the court must determine “whether the PTO would have allowed the claim if it had been
aware of the undisclosed reference.” Id. In making this determination, the court must give
claims their broadest reasonable construction. Id.
11. There is an exception to but-for materiality in the case where there is egregious affirmative
misconduct. Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1292.
This exception to the general rule requiring but-for proof incorporates elements of
the early unclean hands cases before the Supreme Court, which dealt with
“deliberately planned and carefully executed scheme[s]” to defraud the PTO and
the courts. Hazel–Atlas [Glass Co. v. Hartford–Empire Co.], 322 U.S. [238,] 245,
64 S.Ct. 997, 88 L.Ed. 1250 [(1944)]. When the patentee has engaged in
affirmative acts of egregious misconduct, such as the filing of an unmistakably
false affidavit, the misconduct is material. See Rohm & Haas Co. v. Crystal
Chem. Co., 722 F.2d 1556, 1571 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (“there is no room to argue that
submission of false affidavits is not material”); see also Refac Int'l, Ltd. v. Lotus
Dev. Corp., 81 F.3d 1576, 1583 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (finding the intentional omission
of declarant's employment with inventor's company rendered the affidavit false
and that “[a]ffidavits are inherently material”). After all, a patentee is unlikely to
go to great lengths to deceive the PTO with a falsehood unless it believes that the
falsehood will affect issuance of the patent. See [Hazel–Atlas, 322 U.S.] at 247
(pointing out that patentee's lawyers “went to considerable trouble and expense”
to manufacture false evidence because they believed it was needed to obtain
issuance of the patent).
Id. (emphasis added).
12. An “egregious conduct” finding, however, is reserved for extreme behavior. The “egregious
conduct” exception applies in the case where the evidence reveals “deliberately planned and
carefully executed scheme[s]” to defraud the PTO and the courts. Hazel–Atlas Glass Co. v.
Hartford–Empire Co., 322 U.S. 238, 245 (1944), overruled on other grounds by Standard
18
Oil Co. v. United States, 429 U.S. 17 (1976). The cases cited by Therasense as examples of
“egregious conduct” all involved affirmatively fraudulent conduct such as perjury, bribery
and the manufacturing of false documentation. Hazel–Atlas, 322 U.S. at 245 (manufacturing
evidence by drafting fake scholarly article in order to trick and defraud the PTO); Precision
Instrument Manufacturing Co. v. Automotive Maintenance Machinery Co., 324 U.S. 806,
809-10 (1945) (purposely false preliminary statement in PTO proceedings, followed by
perjurious testimony); Keystone Driller Co. v. General Excavator Co., 290 U.S. 240, 243,
246–47 (1933) (patentee bribed prior user to sign false affidavit, which patentee then filed
with the PTO).
13. Thus, to prove inequitable conduct, emsCharts bears the burden of proving by clear and
convincing evidence that one or more people substantively involved with the application that
led to the ’073 patent (and the prosecution of that application before the PTO) both: (1) had
the specific intent to deceive the PTO; and (2) misrepresented or omitted but-for material
information. Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1287.
14. If emsCharts satisfies its burden of proving deceptive intent and materiality, this Court must
balance the equities to determine whether the patentee’s conduct before the PTO warrants
rendering the entire patent unenforceable. Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1287.
15. “Intent and materiality are separate requirements.” Am. Calcar, 651 F.3d at 1334. The Court
cannot “use a ‘sliding scale,’ where a weak showing of intent may be found sufficient based
on a strong showing of materiality, or vice versa.” Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1290. “A district
court may not infer intent solely from materiality.” Id.
16. The Court must “weigh the evidence of intent to deceive independent of its analysis of
materiality.” Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1290.
17. A presumption exists that the PTO examiners did their job and may be viewed as a
presumption of administrative correctness. Brooktree Corp. v. Advanced Mico Devices, Inc.,
977 F.2d 1555, 1574 (Fed. Cir. 1992).
19
18. To prevail, emsCharts “must prove that the applicant acted with the specific intent to deceive
the PTO.” Therasense, 649 F.3d 1290. In a case involving nondisclosure of information,
clear and convincing evidence must show “that the applicant knew of the reference, knew it
was material, and made a deliberate decision to withhold it.” Id. at 1289.
19. “Because the party alleging inequitable conduct bears the burden of proof, the patentee need
not offer any good faith explanation unless the accused infringer first . . . prove[s] a threshold
level of intent to deceive by clear and convincing evidence. The absence of a good faith
explanation for withholding a material reference does not, by itself, prove intent to deceive.”
Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1291 (internal citations omitted).
20. The specific intent to deceive must “be the single most reasonable inference to be drawn
from the evidence to meet the clear and convincing standard.’” Am. Calcar, 651 F.3d at
1334.
21. The evidence “must be sufficient to require a finding of deceitful intent in light of all the
circumstances.” Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1290 (emphasis in original).
22. “When there are multiple reasonable inferences that may be drawn, intent to deceive cannot
be found.” Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1290-91.
23. “A finding that the misrepresentation or omission amounts to gross negligence or negligence
under a ‘should have known’ standard does not satisfy” the intent requirement. See, e.g.,
Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1290.
24. “Proving that the applicant knew of a reference, should have known of its materiality, and
decided not to submit it to the PTO does not prove specific intent to deceive.” Therasense,
649 F.3d at 1290.
C. Withholding The AeroMed Brochure Does Not Justify A Finding Of Inequitable
Conduct Under Therasense
25. The AeroMed Brochure was cumulative to the AeroMed user manuals, the FMM and DM,
which the PTO ruled were not but-for material in the ‘073 Reexamination.
20
26. Since the AeroMed Brochure was cumulative to the FMM and DM, and the PTO ruled that
the FMM and DM were not but-for material to the ‘073 claims in the ‘073 Reexamination,
emsCharts did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that the AeroMed Brochure would
have been but-for material to the ‘073 claims.
a. The AeroMed Brochure Was Not But-For Material
i. The AeroMed Brochure, And All The Other Documents Detailing
The AeroMed Software System Admitted In This Litigation, Are
Not Enabling
27. The AeroMed Brochure was not but-for material, because it was not enabling and therefore
could not anticipate the claims of the ‘073 patent.
28. The test for passing the enabling disclosure requirement under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first
paragraph, is whether one reasonably skilled in the art could make or use the claimed
invention from the disclosed subject matter together with information in the art without
undue experimentation. United States v. Telectronics, Inc., 857 F.2d 778, 785 (Fed. Cir.
1988).
29. The AeroMed Software System that is the subject of the AeroMed Brochure represents a
significant body of programming effort that, under Federal Circuit standards, could not be
enabled by a mere bullet-point brochure.
See White Consolo, 713 F.2d at 791 (no
enablement where 1½ to 2 years required).
30. emsCharts cannot meet its burden to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the
AeroMed Brochure is enabled.
31. Further, emsCharts has failed to provide adequate evidence of how a person of skill in the art
would allegedly interpret the AeroMed Brochure.
32. emsCharts has failed to establish by clear and convincing evidence that that the ‘073 patent
claims would not have been patentable but for the withholding of the AeroMed Brochure.
33. Since the AeroMed Brochure lacked enablement, it could not have stopped the PTO from
granting the ‘073 Patent claims had it been disclosed. Accordingly, under the appropriate
21
Therasense “but-for” test, the AeroMed Brochure is not material, and emsCharts’ inequitable
conduct defense fails.
34. For these same reasons, the AeroMed Website (which according to emsCharts is
substantively identical to the AeroMed Brochure) is not material, and emsCharts’ inequitable
conduct defense fails there as well.
35. The only other documentary evidence of the AeroMed Software System submitted in this case
was the FMM and DM. The PTO has already found that those references were not enabling
as they were applied to the ‘073 Patent claims. emsCharts has not provided this Court with
clear and convincing evidence why this Court should set aside the PTO’s finding on this
issue. Additionally, emsCharts did not meet its burden to prove otherwise by clear and
convincing evidence, because it has failed to provide evidence of how a person of skill in the
art would interpret the FMM and DM. Therefore, the FMM and DM are not material, and
emsCharts’ inequitable conduct defense fails.
36. This Court concludes that the documentary evidence produced in this case that details the
AeroMed Software System is not enabling. This Court further concludes that emsCharts
failed to meet its burden to prove otherwise by clear and convincing evidence, and that it
failed to provide any independent or corroborated evidence of how a person of skill in the art
would interpret any of the documents describing the AeroMed Software System. Therefore,
under the appropriate Therasense “but-for” test, emsCharts’ inequitable conduct defense
fails.
ii. The AeroMed Brochure Was Not But-For Material Because It Was
Undated And Obtained After The Patent Was Filed
37. The AeroMed Brochure is an undated document obtained after the patent application was
filed. Without more, the patent office could not consider it as prior art. See 37 CFR §
1.98(b)(5) (“Each publication listed in an information disclosure statement must be identified
by publisher, author (if any), title, relevant pages of the publication, date, and place of
publication.”).
22
38. The patent office rule book, the “MPEP,” instructs examiners not to consider submitted
references that do not comply with 37 C.F.R. § 1.98. See MPEP § 609.
39. Accordingly, if a patent examiner is provided with an undated non-patent publication, they
should strike it from the record and not consider it, as happened in C.R. Bard, Inc. v. U.S.
Surgical Corp., 388 F.3d 858, 868 fn. 5 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
40. The patent attorney that prosecuted the ‘073 application made it his practice not to submit
undated documents. (5/11/12 IC Trans. 56:4-57:12).
41. While the AeroMed Brochure could have been a material reference for other purposes under
the old Rule 56, it could not have itself been a but-for material reference under the new
Therasense rule, because it could not form the basis of a priority rejection if it was not prior
art.
42. For example, if the AeroMed Brochure stated that a certain software module was available,
and if this was inconsistent with statements in the ‘073 application that said no such software
module was available, then this could not form the basis of a rejection because the undated
AeroMed Brochure could be referring to things that came into existence after the priority date
of the ‘073 application.
43. If the patent examiner in the original ‘073 application had been provided with the undated
AeroMed Brochure, it is more likely than not that the examiner would have followed section
609 of the MPEP and acted as in the C.R. Bard case and simply struck it from the record
without considering it.
iii. Even If The AeroMed Brochure Could Have Led To The AeroMed
Website, The ‘073 Claims Would Have Still Been Patentable
44. The AeroMed Brochure was not but-for material, because even if applicants had provided it
to the PTO during prosecution of the ‘073 patent, the evidence indicates that at most the
examiner might have discovered a web page that contained the same information about the
AeroMed Software System as the AeroMed Brochure, which itself was not enabling and
23
failed to anticipate all the elements of any of the claims of the ‘073 patent as precisely
demonstrated in the ‘073 reexamination.
b. The Evidence Does Not Require A Finding Of Deceitful Intent
45. Even if the AeroMed Brochure would have been but-for material, emsCharts did not prove
by clear and convincing evidence:
(1) that the applicants of the ‘073 patent or their
prosecution counsel knew that the AeroMed Brochure was but-for material; and (2) that they
made a deliberate decision to withhold it from the PTO with the specific intent to deceive the
PTO. In view of the plausible good faith explanations provided by applicants and their
patent prosecution counsel, a specific intent to deceive is not “the single most reasonable
inference to be drawn from the evidence.’” Am. Calcar, 651 F.3d at 1334. Nor is the
evidence “sufficient to require a finding of deceitful intent in light of all the circumstances.”
Therasense, 649 F.3d at 1290 (emphasis in original).
i. The Characterizations of The AeroMed Software System In The
‘073 Specification Were Consistent With Applicant’s
Understanding
46. Dr. Hutton believed the AeroMed Software System did not have integrated billing capacity as
that term would have been understood by a person of skill in the art in the context of the ‘073
specification.
D. No Egregious Misconduct
47. There is no duty on a patent applicant to search the prior art or seek out anything not already
in the applicant’s possession. Tafas v. Doll, 559 F.3d 1345, 1373-1374 (Fed. Cir. 2009).
Accordingly, there was no bad faith or “egregious” conduct here due to the applicant’s not
seeking out further information regarding the AeroMed Software System, and if the applicant
had provided the examiner with the AeroMed Brochure, the examiner would have had to
research it on his or her own. Id. The Court concludes, that consistent with Tafas, the PTO
did not and could not seek further information from Applicant regarding the AeroMed
Software System that was not already in Applicant’s possession.
24
This conclusion is
consistent with Applicant’s counsel’s testimony that in over 20 years of practice, no PTO
examiner has ever asked him to conduct prior art research for the PTO.
48. Further, the representations in the ‘073 Patent specification and those made in the August
1998 IDS regarding the AeroMed Software System were consistent with the understanding
Golden Hour had at the time of those representations. Therefore, these representation cannot
amount to “egregious” misconduct.
49. Based on the Court’s review of the underlying factual circumstances in this case, it concludes
there was insufficient evidence of “willful blindness” on the part of Golden Hour or its
prosecution counsel.
50. Neither the applicants of the ‘073 patent nor their prosecution counsel engaged in affirmative
acts of “egregious” misconduct because their actions have reasonable good faith
explanations.
51. Even if all of emsCharts’ inequitable conduct allegations were true, emsCharts would still not
have proven that the applicants of the ‘073 patent or their prosecution counsel engaged in
affirmative acts of “egregious” misconduct as that term has been construed in the case law.
E. No Inequitable Conduct
52. emsCharts did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that the applicants of the ‘073
patent or their prosecution counsel misrepresented or omitted but-for material information
during the prosecution of the ′073 patent with the specific intent to deceive the PTO.
53. emsCharts did not prove by clear and convincing evidence that the applicants of the ‘073
patent or their prosecution counsel submitted materially false information to the PTO during
the prosecution of the ′073 patent with the specific intent to deceive the PTO.
54. The applicants of the ‘073 patent and their prosecution counsel did not engage in inequitable
conduct during the prosecution of the ′073 patent.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the Court finds emsCharts has not demonstrated by clear
and convincing evidence that the applicants of the ‘073 patent or their prosecution counsel
25
engaged in inequitable conduct during the prosecution of the ′073 patent. Accordingly, the ′073
patent is not rendered unenforceable on this ground, and judgment shall be entered in favor of
Golden Hour, and against emsCharts on the issue of inequitable conduct.
SIGNED this 19th day of December, 2011.
So ORDERED and SIGNED this 15th day of August, 2012.
____________________________________
RODNEY GILSTRAP
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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