T-Rex Property AB v. Regal Entertainment Group
Filing
183
ORDER ADOPTING-IN-PART REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS for 152 Report and Recommendations. The Court GRANTS summary judgment of invalidity as to claims 25 and 26 of the '470 Patent and claim 22 of the '334 Patent and DENIES summary judgment of invalidity as to claim 32 of the '334 Patent and claims 13, 42, and 43 of the '603 Patent. Signed by District Judge Jeremy D. Kernodle on 9/27/2019. (mjc, ) Modified on 9/27/2019 (mjc, ).
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
TYLER DIVISION
T-REX PROPERTY AB,
§
§
§
§
§
§
Case No. 6:16-cv-927-JDK-KNM
(Lead Case)
§
§
v.
§
§
CLEAR CHANNNEL OUTDOOR
§
HOLDINGS, INC; CLEAR TV MEDIA §
USA, INC.; and MONSTER VISION,
§
LLC D/B/A/ MONSTER MEDIA.
§
Case No. 6:16-cv-974-JDK-KNM
(Consolidated Case)
v.
REGAL ENTERTAINMENT GROUP.
T-REX PROPERTY AB,
ORDER ADOPTING-IN-PART REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION OF
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
This case was referred to United States Magistrate Judge K. Nicole Mitchell
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636. Judge Mitchell has presented for consideration a Report
and Recommendation (Docket No. 152, the “Report”), which contains her findings,
conclusions, and recommendations regarding the invalidity portion of Defendants’
Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 130). The Report recommends grantingin-part and denying-in-part the motion. Both Plaintiff T-Rex and Defendants Clear
Channel Outdoor Holdings, Inc.; Clear TV Media USA, Inc.; and Monster Vision, LLC
filed written objections (Docket Nos. 154; 156).1 Having reviewed the briefing on the
Defendants Clear TV Media USA, Inc. and Monster Vision, LLC have since been dismissed from this
action. Docket No. 172. Accordingly, the Court OVERRULES as MOOT all objections to the Report
those two parties raised.
1
1
motion, the Report, and the written objections, and for the reasons explained below,
the Court ADOPTS-IN-PART the Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation
(Docket No. 152), GRANTS summary judgment of invalidity as to claims 25 and 26
of U.S. Patent No. RE39,470 (“the ’470 Patent”) and claim 22 of U.S. Patent No.
7,382,334 (“the ’334 Patent”), and DENIES summary judgment of invalidity as to
claim 32 of the ’334 Patent and claims 13, 42, and 43 of U.S. Patent No. 6,430,603
(“the ’603 Patent”).
I.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews objected-to portions of the Magistrate Judge’s Report and
Recommendation de novo. FED. R. CIV. P. 72 and 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1) (“A judge of
the court shall make a de novo determination of those portions of the report or
specified proposed findings or recommendations to which objection is made.”). In
conducting a de novo review, the Court examines the entire record and makes an
independent assessment under the law. Douglass v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n, 79
F.3d 1415, 1430 (5th Cir. 1996) (en banc), superseded on other grounds by statute, 28
U.S.C. § 636(b)(1) (extending the time to file objections from ten to fourteen days).
II.
PARTY OBJECTIONS
The Report recommends granting summary judgment of invalidity on claim 25
of the ’470 Patent on § 101 grounds and granting summary judgment of invalidity on
claim 22 of the ’334 Patent for indefiniteness. The Report further recommends
denying summary judgment on claim 26 of the ’470 Patent and claim 32 of the ’334
Patent because Defendant Clear Channel failed to show that claim 25 is
2
representative of these claims and denying summary judgment on the asserted claims
of the ’603 Patent because they are directed to patent-eligible subject matter.
Defendant Clear Channel objects to the Magistrate Judge’s findings that: (1) it
failed to show that claim 25 of the ’470 Patent is representative of claim 26 of the ’470
Patent and claim 32 of the ’334 Patent; and (2) the asserted claims of the ’603 Patent
are directed to patent-eligible subject matter.
Plaintiff T-Rex objects to the Magistrate Judge’s recommendation to grant
summary judgment as to claim 25 of the ’470 Patent and claim 22 of the ’334 Patent.
Specifically, T-Rex contends that the Magistrate Judge’s analysis of claim 25 was
flawed in both steps of the two-step § 101 analysis. See Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank Int’l.,
573 U.S. 208 (2014). T-Rex also objects to the recommendation to grant summary
judgment that claim 22 is invalid due to indefiniteness “solely in order to preserve
error for appeal.” Docket No. 154 at 6.
A.
Claim Representativeness
The Magistrate Judge recommends denying summary judgment as to claim 26
of the ’470 Patent and claim 32 of the ’334 Patent because Clear Channel failed to
show that claim 25 of the ’470 Patent is representative of the other two claims.
Relying on representativeness, Clear Channel presented substantive arguments
based only on claim 25 of the ’470 Patent, making no independent arguments for
invalidity of claim 26 of the ’470 Patent or claim 32 of the ’334 Patent.
Acknowledging that the Magistrate Judge did not have the benefit of Chief
Judge Gilstrap’s recent Memorandum Opinion and Order on this issue, the Court
finds PPS Data, LLC v. Jack Henry & Associates, Inc., No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket
3
No. 156, at 5-18 (E.D. Tex. Sept. 6, 2019) instructive here. PPS Data notes “that the
Federal Circuit has never expressly addressed the legal framework for addressing
disputes about representative claims.” Id. at 5. Accordingly, Chief Judge Gilstrap
proposes a burden-shifting framework for analyzing representativeness.
Under the PPS Data framework, “[t]he party asserting invalidity may
overcome the presumption of independent validity by offering a substantial rationale
for treating a claim as representative of other asserted claims.” Id. at 7. Once the
party challenging validity has made “a prima facie case demonstrating
representativeness,” the burden shifts to the patentee to identify limitations in the
asserted claims that are not represented by the allegedly representative claim. Id.
at 9. “Unless a court finds the issue of representativeness to be clear, it should
conduct—and require the parties to conduct—an individualized analysis of the claims
at issue.” Id. at 11.
Clear Channel argues that claim 25 of the ’470 Patent is representative of
claim 26 of the ’470 Patent and claim 32 of the ’334 Patent because the claims “are
substantively similar and directed to the same abstract idea.”
Docket No. 130
at 24 n.2. Clear Channel explains that in the ’470 Patent, claim 26 merely rewrites
method claim 25 as a system claim “by adding a handful of generic computer
components configured to implement the same abstract idea recited in [c]laim 25.”
Id. On the ’334 Patent, Clear Channel argues that unasserted claim 22 is a method
claim that simply rearranges the steps of claim 25 of the ’470 Patent and that asserted
claim 32 of the ’334 Patent rewrites claim 22’s method as an “arrangement for
4
coordinating and controlling electric displays.” Id. Clear Channel contends that
adding generic computer components or rearranging the claimed steps does not
change the fundamental abstract nature of the claims. Id.
1.
’470 Patent, Claim 26
Reviewing the relevant ’470 Patent claims, the Court finds that Clear Channel
has made a prima facie case that claim 25 of the ’470 Patent is representative of claim
26 of the ’470 Patent. “[T]he representativeness inquiry must be ‘directly tethered to
the claim language.’” PPS Data, No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket No. 156 at 7 (quoting
Solutran, Inc. v. Elavon, Inc., 931 F.3d 1161, 1168 (Fed. Cir. 2019)). Here, claims 25
and 26 of the ’470 Patent use virtually identical language to claim a method and a
system respectively. The only changes to claim 26 are the addition of the generic
computers and “means” for executing the method of claim 25. But where a system
claim recites “a handful of generic computer components configured to implement the
same idea” as an ineligible method claim, the claims rise or fall together. Alice Corp.,
573 U.S. 208, at 226–27 (2014). And here, the recited computers and “means” terms,
as construed, are merely generic computer components, including “a computerized
control center having a plurality of communication interfaces,” “Server 3 of central
computer 28” configured to perform the steps of the claim, “a computerized device . . .
coupled to said computerized control center,” and “projector computer 38 connected
to projector 22 or an electronic display.” See Docket No. 104 at 12, 15–16 (construing
claim 26’s means terms).
T-Rex does not effectively rebut Clear Channel’s argument that claim 25 is
representative of claim 26 in the ’470 Patent. Rather, T-Rex merely “objects” to claim
5
25 as representative because claim 26 includes “means” limitations that have
“lengthy corresponding structures” that claim 25 does not. Docket No. 14 at 42 n.6.
But T-Rex never challenges that the “means” limitations are anything other than
generic computer components. And because these “means” limitations are merely
generic computer components that carry out functions virtually identical to the steps
of claim 25’s method, this is not a meaningful distinction. Accordingly, Clear Channel
has made a prima facie case for representativeness, and T-Rex has not presented “any
meaningful argument for the distinctive significance of any claim limitations”
between claims 25 and 26 of the ’470 Patent. PPS Data, No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket
No. 156 at 9 (quoting Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1365). The Court therefore finds that
claim 25 is representative of claim 26 in the ’470 Patent and SUSTAINS Clear
Channel’s objections as to representativeness of that claim.
2.
’334 Patent, Claim 32
Conversely, Clear Channel has not made a prima facie case of substantial
similarity between claim 25 of the ’470 Patent and claim 32 of the ’334 Patent. First,
and most critically, claim 32’s language is substantially different than claim 25’s.
Compare ’470 Patent, claim 25 with ’334 Patent, claim 32. While many of the same
ideas may be present, it is not clear that claim 32 of the ’334 Patent covers a system
implementing the method of claim 25 of the ’470 Patent in the same way that claim
26 of the ’470 Patent does. Again, “the representativeness inquiry must be ‘directly
tethered to the claim language.’” PPS Data, No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket No. 156 at 7
(quoting Solutran, Inc. v. Elavon, Inc., 931 F.3d 1161, 1168 (Fed. Cir. 2019)). And
6
Clear Channel does not sufficiently demonstrate the required parallels between the
claim language.2
Also, “absent a case-specific justification, courts should generally not find a
claim in one patent representative of other claims in other patents.” Id. at 8 (citing
Novartis Pham. Corp. v. Breckenridge Pharm. Inc., 909 F.3d 1355, 1362 (Fed. Cir.
2018)). Here, claim 25 comes from the ’470 Patent while claim 32 comes from the ’334
Patent. Further, while the ’334 Patent issued from a continuation-in-part of the
application leading to the ’470 Patent and includes many similarities, the patents do
not share an identical specification. Cf. PPS Data, No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket No. 156
at 14 (“If claims are supported by the same written description, the probability of
overlap between claimed material is higher than if the claims are supported by
separate specifications.”).
Claim 32 of the ’334 Patent differs significantly from claim 25 of the ’470
Patent. And, considering these differences, Clear Channel has failed to offer “a
substantial rationale” for treating claim 25 of the ’470 Patent as representative of
claim 32 of the ’334 Patent. PPS Data, No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket No. 156 at 7.
Further, Clear Channel provided no independent invalidity analysis for ’334 Patent,
claim 32. Accordingly, for claim 32 of the ’334 Patent, the Court OVERRULES Clear
Channel’s objections, ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge’s Report & Recommendation,
and DENIES summary judgment of invalidity.
While Chief Judge Gilstrap explains that a chart mapping representative claim limitations is not
required, this is certainly a case where it would “add force to a claim of representativeness” and may
have helped Defendant carry its prima facie burden. PPS Data, No. 2:18-cv-7-JRG, Docket No. 156
at 7 n.4.
2
7
B.
’470 Patent, Claims 25 and 26 Validity3
The Magistrate Judge recommends granting summary judgment of invalidity
as to claim 25 of the ’470 Patent because it is directed to patent-ineligible subject
matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101. The Supreme Court has outlined a two-step § 101
analysis consisting of the “ineligible concept” step and the “inventive concept” step.
See Alice, 573 U.S. at 217. In computer-based patents, step one looks to whether
claims recite patent-ineligible “abstract-idea-based solutions implemented with
generic technical components in a conventional way” or whether claims recite an
eligible “technology-based solution and software-based invention that improves the
performance of the computer system itself.” Intellectual Ventures II LLC v. BITCO
Gen. Ins. Corp., 362 F.Supp.3d 370, 375 (E.D. Tex. 2019) (quoting Amdocs (Israel)
Ltd. V. Openet Telecom, Inc., 841 F.3d 1288, 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2016)). If a claim is
directed to a patent-ineligible concept, courts move on to step two, the inventiveconcept step. Id. The inventive-concept step “considers the elements of each claim
both individually and as an ordered combination to determine whether the additional
elements transform the nature of the claim into a patent-eligible application.” Id.
(quoting Alice, 573 U.S. at 217–218) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Magistrate Judge found that claim 25 is directed to an abstract idea and
that nothing in the claim transforms the otherwise patent-ineligible abstract idea
into patent-eligible subject matter. Docket No. 152 at 21. The Magistrate Judge
Because the Court finds that claim 25 of the ’470 Patent is representative of claim 26, the analysis
here applies to both claims 25 and 26 of the ’470 Patent.
3
8
therefore found that ’470 Patent, claim 25 failed both steps of Alice’s § 101 eligibility
test. Id.
When evaluating the ineligible concept step, it is “sufficient to compare claims
at issue to those claims already found to be directed to an abstract idea in previous
cases.” Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft Corp., 822 F.3d 1327, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2016). The
Magistrate Judge looked to Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, Inc., 896 F.3d 1335 (Fed.
Cir. 2018), among others, for comparison. Thoroughly analyzing claim 25 here, the
Magistrate Judge found that it is directed to “receiving, organizing, displaying, and
updating information for display.” Docket No. 152 at 16-17. And as in Interval
Licensing, claim 25 is “directed to an abstract idea because [it] consist[s] of generic
and conventional information acquisition and organization steps that are connected
to, but do not convert the abstract idea . . . into a particular conception of how to carry
out that concept.” 896 F.3d at 1346.
T-Rex contends the Magistrate Judge erred in her ineligible-concept analysis
by distinguishing Enfish as inapposite. The Court disagrees with T-Rex’s conclusory
contention that the Magistrate Judge “unduly narrowed the Enfish holding to its
facts.” Docket No. 154 at 2. In Enfish, the Federal Circuit determined that the claims
at issue were “directed to a specific improvement to the way computers operate,
embodied in the self-referential table.” Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1336. In other words, the
technology in Enfish was specifically designed to improve the way a computer
functions by improving upon the way existing computer software operated. Here, TRex has not improved the way a computer operates. Rather, the claimed invention
9
discloses a series of broad, generic, and functional information-acquisition and organization steps. The Court therefore agrees with the Magistrate Judge that claim
25 is directed to an abstract idea.
In Alice step two, the Court considers “whether there are any ‘additional
features’ in the claims that constitute an ‘inventive concept,’ thereby rendering the
claims eligible for patenting even if they are directed to an abstract idea.” Intellectual
Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Fin. Corp., 850 F.3d 1332, 1342 (Fed. Cir. 2017)
(quoting Alice, 573 U.S. at 221). “Those ‘additional features’ must be more than ‘wellunderstood, routine, conventional activity.” Id. (quoting Mayo Collaborative Servs. v.
Prometheus Labs., Inc., 566 U.S. 66, 79 (2012)). “[M]erely describ[ing] the functions
of the abstract idea itself, without particularity . . . is simply not enough under step
two.” Id. at 1341.
Under step two, T-Rex objects that the Magistrate Judge misapplied
Berkheimer v. HP Inc., 881 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Docket No. 154 at 4. T-Rex
argues that Berkheimer holds that whether claim elements are routine and
conventional to the skilled artisan in the relevant field is a question of fact rendering
summary judgment inappropriate.
Id.
T-Rex asserts that because it provided
unrebutted expert testimony that certain claim elements were not “well-understood,
routine, and conventional,” that “it was inappropriate to grant summary judgment of
invalidity.” Id.
However, the Magistrate Judge fully considered T-Rex’s expert-witness
testimony. Docket No. 152 at 19–21. Generally, the Magistrate Judge found the
10
expert’s statements conclusory, and therefore “insufficient to create a genuine issue
of material fact as to whether the claim element or combination of elements is wellunderstood, routine and conventional to a skilled artisan in the relevant field.”
Docket No. 152 at 20 (citing Sitrick v. Dreamworks, LLC, 516 F.3d 993, 1001 (Fed.
Cir. 2008); Printeron Inc. v. Breezyprint Corp., 93 F. Supp. 3d 658, 699 (S.D. Tex.
2015); and GTX Corp. v. Kofax Image Prods., 571 F. Supp. 2d 742, 751 (E.D. Tex.
2008)). Examining the expert’s statements, the Court agrees. While Mr. Jawadi
opines that claim 25 “incorporates unique, innovative, non-conventional, non-generic
elements,” he merely repeats the claimed limitations without explaining their
novelty. E.g., Docket No. 1-5 at ¶ 28. Further, T-Rex could provide no satisfatory
explanation of claim 25’s inventive concept when questioned at oral argument.
Docket No. 152 at 19. Offering only conclusory expert opinions, T-Rex has failed to
raise a genuine issue of material fact under step two and has not demonstrated that
claim 25 contains an inventive concept.
Accordingly, for claims 25 and 26 of the ’470 Patent, the Court OVERRULES
T-Rex’s objections, ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge’s Report & Recommendation, and
GRANTS summary judgment of invalidity.
C.
’603 Patent, Claim 13 Validity
The Magistrate Judge recommends denying summary judgment of invalidity
as to claim 13 of the ’603 Patent, finding that the asserted claims are directed to
11
patent-eligible subject matter.4 In her Report, the Magistrate Judge found that Clear
Channel failed to satisfy its burden to show that the ’603 Patent is directed to an
abstract concept under step one of Alice, rendering step two unnecessary. Docket
No. 152 at 21–25.
Clear Channel contends that claim 13 of the ’603 Patent, the only asserted
independent claim, is even broader and more abstract than claim 25 of the ’470 Patent
because it does not incorporate real-time control, and it is directed to the abstract
idea of scheduling displays and transmitting content. See Docket No. 130 at 25. Clear
Channel further argues that claim 13 is directed to “collecting information from third
parties about what and when to display, manipulating that information, and
ultimately displaying that information.” Docket No. 130 at 26–27. T-Rex responds
that Clear Channel’s characterization ignores the novel configuration of software and
hardware components recited in the asserted claims and describes the claim at such
a high level of abstraction that it misapplies 35 U.S.C. § 101. Docket No. 144 at 44.
Claim 13 of the ’603 Patent does not merely recite generic information
acquisition and organization steps, as Clear Channel contends.
Rather, as the
Magistrate Judge explained, it is directed to a specific system that allows a content
contributor to select the time and location at which specific content is displayed across
a network of display devices at various geographic locations. See Docket No. 152 at 4.
Claim 13 thus describes a non-abstract idea. The Magistrate Judge properly found
Clear Channel also moved for summary judgment of invalidity on claims 42 and 43 of the ’603 Patent,
relying on their substantive arguments for claim 13. Because the Court denies summary judgment of
invalidity as to claim 13, it also denies summary judgment of invalidity as to claims 42 and 43.
4
12
that Clear Channel failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that claim 13 of
the ’603 Patent is directed to an abstract idea under Alice. Id. at 24–25. Accordingly,
for the asserted claims of the ’603 Patent, the Court OVERRULES Clear Channel’s
objections, ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge’s Report & Recommendation, and
DENIES summary judgment of invalidity.
D.
’334 Patent, Claim 22 Validity
The Magistrate Judge recommends granting summary judgment of invalidity
as to claim 22 of the ’334 Patent. Docket No. 152 at 2 n.2. The Magistrate Judge’s
Markman Order found the term “able to create and update said exposure list in real
time with control instruction fields via dynamic booking of information in time for
exposure from mediators” indefinite. Docket No. 104 at 22–23. The Court overruled
T-Rex’s objections and adopted the Markman Order, including the ruling on this term
from claim 22. Docket No. 136 at 7. T-Rex objects to summary judgment as to
claim 22 of the ’334 Patent “solely in order to preserve error for appeal.” Docket
No. 154 at 6.
T-Rex contends that the indefinite term is “readily capable of
construction with reasonable certainty without any correction, and that Clear
Channel has not carried its clear and convincing burden of proof of invalidity by
showing a substantive ambiguity in claim scope.” Id. at 7.
The Court has considered and rejected T-Rex’s argument on this term.
Accordingly, for claim 22 of the ’334 Patent, the Court OVERRULES T-Rex’s
objections, ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge’s Report & Recommendation, and
GRANTS summary judgment of invalidity.
13
III.
CONCLUSION
Having reviewed the objected-to portions de novo, the Court ADOPTS-INPART the Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation (Docket No. 152). As
explained above, the Court GRANTS summary judgment of invalidity as to claims 25
and 26 of the ’470 Patent and claim 22 of the ’334 Patent and DENIES summary
judgment of invalidity as to claim 32 of the ’334 Patent and claims 13, 42, and 43 of
the ’603 Patent.
So ORDERED and SIGNED this 27th day of September, 2019.
___________________________________
JEREMY D. KERNODLE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
14
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?