B-50.com, LLC v. InfoSync Services, LLC
Filing
87
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER denying 65 Motion for Summary Judgment filed by InfoSync Services, LLC. (Ordered by Chief Judge Sidney A Fitzwater on 1/27/2014) (Chief Judge Sidney A Fitzwater)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
DALLAS DIVISION
B-50.COM, LLC,
Plaintiff,
VS.
INFOSYNC SERVICES, LLC,
Defendant.
§
§
§
§ Civil Action No. 3:10-CV-1994-D
§
§
§
§
§
MEMORANDUM OPINION
AND ORDER
Defendant InfoSync Services, LLC (“InfoSync”) moves for partial summary judgment
dismissing the claims of plaintiff B-50.com, LLC (“B-50”) for contributory infringement and
inducement of infringement asserted under claim 1 of United States Patent No. 6,633,851
(“the ‘851 patent”). InfoSync maintains that B-50 cannot prove that InfoSync’s accused
product—RightsViewWeb (“RVW”)—infringes the ‘851 patent. The court construes a claim
term that it declined to construe in its Markman ruling, revises its construction of another
claim term, and denies InfoSync’s motion for the reasons that follow.
I
Because the background facts and pertinent legal standards are set out in the court’s
Markman claim construction decision, see B-50.com, LLC v. Infosync Services, LLC, 2012
WL 4866508, at *1-2 (N.D. Tex. Oct. 15, 2012) (Fitzwater, C.J.) (“B-50 I”), the court will
limit its discussion of the background facts and legal standards to what is necessary to
understand today’s decision.1 B-50 holds the ‘851 patent, which recites “[a] method of
generating custom reports based on restaurant point-of-sale data transferred between multiple
remote computing devices and a central computing device.” D. 5-15-13 App. 90.2 B-50
contends that InfoSync’s accused product—RVW—performs all the steps of claim 1 of the
‘851 patent, and it asserts claims for contributory infringement and inducement of
infringement. InfoSync moves for partial summary judgment dismissing B-50’s claims,
contending that B-50 cannot prove that RVW directly infringes claim 1 (specifically,
elements 1(b) (third indented paragraph) and 1(d)).
II
“Summary judgment is appropriate when there are no genuine issues of material fact
and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Meyer Intellectual Props.
Ltd. v. Bodum, Inc., 690 F.3d 1354, 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 56); see also
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986). “Indirect infringement, whether
inducement to infringe or contributory infringement, can only arise in the presence of direct
infringement.” Dynacore Holdings Corp. v. U.S. Philips Corp., 363 F.3d 1263, 1272 (Fed.
Cir. 2004). Direct infringement does not arise unless “the accused device . . . contain[s] each
1
In deciding this motion, the court views the evidence in the light most favorable to
B-50 as the summary judgment nonmovant and draws all reasonable inferences in its favor.
See, e.g., Owens v. Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC, 541 F.Supp.2d 869, 870 n.1 (N.D. Tex. 2008)
(Fitzwater, C.J.) (citing U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n v. Safeguard Ins. Co., 422 F.Supp.2d 698, 701
n.2 (N.D. Tex. 2006) (Fitzwater, J.)).
2
For clarity, the court will cite the parties’ briefs and appendixes by the date filed.
-2-
limitation of the claim, either literally or by an equivalent.” TecSec, Inc. v. Int’l Bus. Machs.
Corp., 731 F.3d 1336, 1351 n.2 (Fed. Cir. 2013). Thus “a court may determine infringement
on summary judgment ‘when no reasonable jury could find that every limitation recited in
the properly construed claim either is or is not found in the accused device.’” Innovention
Toys, LLC v. MGA Entm’t, Inc., 637 F.3d 1314, 1319 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (quoting Bai v. L&L
Wings, Inc., 160 F.3d 1350, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 1998)).
III
InfoSync first moves for partial summary judgment based on claim 1(b) (third
indented paragraph).
A
The third indented paragraph of claim 1 (B) states:
displaying on a page one or more operative data-entry fields
configured to process a selection operation from the
restaurant-industry user that specifies one or more dates or date
ranges, wherein the operative data-entry fields are substantially
only those required to obtain the dates or date ranges associated
with the at least one specified report format[.]
D. 5-15-13 App. 90 (emphasis added). In B-50 I the court construed “operative data-entry
fields” to mean “places on a screen where the restaurant-industry user may enter data for a
selection operation.” B-50 I, 2012 WL 4866508, at *10. The court declined to construe
“substantially only those required to obtain,” reasoning that it has an ordinary meaning. Id.
at *9.
InfoSync contends that RVW does not infringe claim 1 because RVW does not
-3-
display the “operative data-entry fields,” as required by claim 1(b) (third indented
paragraph). InfoSync posits that the “substantially only” clause in claim 1(b) (third indented
paragraph) requires that there be an individual page containing the operative data-entry fields
described in that paragraph, and that the display of any of the operative data entry fields
described in claim 1(b) (first and second indented paragraphs) on the same page as the dataentry fields described in claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph) means that the limitations in
claim 1(b) are not met. In other words, InfoSync argues that claim 1(b) requires an
individual page that contains date-range fields and nothing else. According to InfoSync, if
the page displaying the date-range fields also displays any other data-entry fields—for
example, data-entry fields that allow the user to select restaurants from which to cull data,
or to select the report’s format—the accused product does not contain all the limitations of
the ‘851 patent. Because RVW includes a page with date-range fields as well as restaurant
selection and report format fields, RVW contends that B-50’s infringement claim must fail.
B-50 maintains that InfoSync’s argument fails for at least four reasons, including that
InfoSync is mistaken in its interpretation of claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph). B-50
contends that “substantially only” relates back to “operative data-entry fields configured to
process a selection operation . . . that specifies one or more dates or date ranges,” and that
it does not mean that the date-range field must be the only operative data entry field on a
single page. B-50 posits that, read properly and in context, the language of claim 1(b) (third
indented paragraph) means that there are one or more operative data entry fields dedicated
exclusively to obtaining dates or date ranges. It maintains that the summary judgment
-4-
evidence shows that RVW contains this claim limitation.
B
In B-50 I the court declined to construe “substantially only those required to obtain.”
Having considered the parties’ dispute in the context of InfoSync’s motion for partial
summary judgment, however, the court concludes that this term should be construed. Cf.,
e.g., Mikkelsen Graphic Eng’g Inc. v. Zund Am., Inc., 2011 WL 1330782, at *5 (E.D. Wis.
Apr. 7, 2011) (revising claim construction sua sponte in order granting summary judgment
for non-infringement), vacated in part on other grounds, ___ Fed. Appx. ___, 2013 WL
4269406 (Fed. Cir. Aug. 16, 2013).3 Based on this construction, the court also holds that
InfoSync is not entitled to summary judgment.
1
The court first considers the language of claim 1. InfoSync argues that the only way
to give effect to the second clause of claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph) is to construe it
to mean that “the only ‘operative data entry field’ displayed on the page is that which enables
the user to select a date or date range.” D. 7-3-13 Br. 9. InfoSync argues that any other
interpretation will render the clause meaningless. The court disagrees. The first clause of
3
As the court will explain, it disagrees with both parties’ proposed constructions.
Because the court “has an independent obligation to determine the meaning of the claim[],
notwithstanding the views asserted by the adversary parties,” Exxon Chemical Patents, Inc.
v. Lubrizol Corp., 64 F.3d 1553, 1555 (Fed. Cir. 1995); see also Bancorp Services, L.L.C.
v. Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada (U.S.), 687 F.3d 1266, 1274 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (“[A]
district court may construe the claims in a way that neither party advocates[.]”), it will
construe the term in a manner that neither side advocates.
-5-
claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph) requires that a page display one or more operative dataentry fields that are configured to allow the user to enter specific dates or date ranges, and
that cause the generated report to contain data only from the dates the user specifies. The
second clause can be read to further require that the data-entry fields displayed are
substantially only those required for the particular report type that the user selects.4
The court considers whether any other claim language is relevant to the dispute
between B-50 and InfoSync. There are three relevant “on a page” limitations contained in
claim 1(b), see D. 5-15-13 App. 90, that do not support InfoSync’s proposed construction.
The Federal Circuit “has repeatedly emphasized that an indefinite article ‘a’ or ‘an’ in patent
parlance carries the meaning of ‘one or more’ in open-ended claims containing the
transitional phrase ‘comprising.’” KCJ Corp. v. Kinetic Concepts, Inc., 223 F.3d 1351, 1356
(Fed. Cir. 2000) (collecting cases); see D. 5-15-13 App. 90 (containing transitional phrase
“comprising”). This manner of interpreting the indefinite article “a” is not “merely . . . a
presumption or even a convention” but a “rule.” Baldwin Graphic Sys., Inc. v. Siebert, Inc.,
512 F.3d 1338, 1342 (Fed. Cir. 2008). “The exceptions to this rule are extremely limited”
and are only applied when “the language of the claims themselves, the specification, or the
prosecution history necessitate a departure from the rule.” Id. at 1343 (emphasis added).
InfoSync has not pointed the court to any claim language that necessitates a departure from
4
Although the court concludes below that the specification and preferred embodiment
support this reading, the court only holds here that InfoSync’s interpretation is not the only
possible construction that gives effect to the second clause of claim 1(b) (third indented
paragraph).
-6-
this rule, and the court concludes that there is no basis to do so.5 Thus the court must read
the three “on a page” clauses as reciting that the information described in claim 1(b) must be
“displayed on one or more pages.” This reading does not support InfoSync’s proposed
construction.
2
The court now considers claim 1 in relation to claim 19. B-50 argues that the doctrine
of claim construction as applied to claims 1 and 19 refutes InfoSync’s interpretation of claim
1. It contends that because “dependent Claim 19 discloses a method where the functions
listed in Claim 1(b)(1)-(3) occur on different pages, this suggests that those functions as first
described in Claim 1 can all occur on the same page.” P. 6-19-13 Br. 17 (emphasis omitted).
InfoSync replies that “B-50’s argument is premised on the notion that each of the three
‘displaying on a page’ elements of claim 1 are displayed on different pages.” D. 7-3-13 Br.
8. But InfoSync contends that the data-entry fields described in claim 1(b) (first and second
indented paragraphs) may be displayed on the same page while “Claim 1(b)(iii) . . . explicitly
requires” that the data-entry fields it describes be displayed on a separate page. Id. Thus
InfoSync maintains that claim 19 depends from claim 1(b) (first and second indented
5
The only claim language that might be read to support InfoSync’s proposed
construction of claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph) is the phrase, “wherein the restaurantindustry user navigates between one or more of the selection operations using Internetbrowser navigation mechanisms[.]” D. 5-15-13 App. 90. Neither party asks the court to
construe this phrase, and the court declines to do so. But the court notes that this phrase may
be read to refer to a user’s navigation to different data-entry fields displayed on the same
page. See, e.g., D. 5-15-13 App. 90 (describing how users can scroll to different portions of
the same screen using a “vertical scroll bar”).
-7-
paragraphs) but is not relevant in construing claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph).
The doctrine of claim differentiation establishes that “the presence of a dependent
claim that adds a particular limitation raises a presumption that the limitation in question is
not found in the independent claim.” Liebel-Flarsheim Co. v. Medrad, Inc., 358 F.3d 898,
910 (Fed. Cir. 2004). This presumption “is especially strong when the limitation in dispute
is the only meaningful difference between an independent and dependent claim, and one
party is urging that the limitation in the dependent claim should be read into the independent
claim.” SunRace Roots Enter. Co. v. SRAM Corp., 336 F.3d 1298, 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
The presumption supplied by the doctrine of claim differentiation “can be overcome if the
circumstances suggest a different explanation, or if the evidence favoring a different claim
construction is strong.” Liebel-Flarsheim, 358 F.3d at 910.
Claim 19 recites “[t]he method of claim 1, wherein displaying the report formats,
displaying the remote locations, and displaying the operative data-entry fields occurs on
different pages.” D. 5-15-13 App. 91. The only meaningful difference between claim 1 and
claim 19 is claim 19’s limitation that the data-entry fields described in claim 1 be displayed
on different pages. Moreover, InfoSync argues that claim 19’s limitation should be read into
claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph).6 Thus the presumption created by the doctrine of
6
InfoSync does not argue that claim 19’s limitation should be read into claim 1 as a
whole, but only into claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph). Cf. SunRace, 336 F.3d at 1303.
Because claim 19 explicitly refers to claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph) in describing the
limitation it adds, the court holds that the strong presumption applied in a case where one
party is urging that the limitation in a dependent claim be read into the independent claim
applies in this case.
-8-
claim differentiation is at its strongest in this case.
In the face of this strong presumption, InfoSync merely asks the court to credit its
interpretation of the second clause of claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph). The court has
already concluded that InfoSync’s proposed construction of that clause is not the only
plausible one. Thus the court holds that InfoSync has failed to rebut the strong presumption
that claim 1, including claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph), does not contain the limitation
that “the operative data-entry fields occur[] on different pages.” D. 5-15-13 App. 91.
3
The specification and drawings provide even stronger evidence that InfoSync’s
proposed interpretation is incorrect. For example, Figs. 8 and 9 depict two halves of the
same “report request screen.” See D. 5-15-13 App. 82. “FIG. 8 illustrates the top half of
portion 420” (bold font omitted), an area on the page where users enter data and make
selection operations, while “FIG. 9 illustrates the lower half of portion 420.” Id. (bold font
omitted). To scroll between the two halves of “420,” the user drags the “vertical scroll bar
430” up or down. Id. (bold font omitted). In Fig. 8, “[r]eport date box 480 accepts the date
variables for the requested report, in the format specified by the user.” Id. (bold font
omitted). Although Fig. 8 contains only one date-entry field, the specification makes clear
that “[d]epending on the report requested, there may be multiple report date fields.” Id.
Immediately to the right of the “Report Date” box, Fig. 8 depicts a “restaurant selection box
440,” id. (bold font omitted), that allows the user to select “[g]roups/stores . . . in any
combination for each report.” Id. Finally, Fig. 9 depicts the area “510” where the “[d]elivery
-9-
method is selected at 510.” Id. (bold font omitted). The specification provides that “the
delivery method can be either web or e-mail delivery.” Id. Figs. 10, 15, 16, and 19 depict
report request screens for different report types, but each drawing contains the three dataentry fields included in Figs. 8 and 9. In other words, Figs. 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, and 19 depict
report request screens where each of the selection operations described in claim 1(b) is
displayed on a single page.
Together, the language of claim 1, the doctrine of claim differentiation as applied to
claims 1(b) and 19, and the specification and drawings demonstrate that InfoSync’s
suggested limitation for claim 1(b) is incorrect.
4
B-50, on the other hand, maintains that “substantially only those required to obtain”
“means simply there are one or more operative data-entry fields dedicated exclusively to
obtaining dates or date ranges.” P. 6-19-13 Br. 19. The court disagrees.
The claim language recites that the data-entry fields dedicated to obtaining dates or
date ranges will be “substantially only those required to obtain the dates or date ranges
associated with the at least one specified report format.” D. 5-15-13 App. 90 (emphasis
added). This suggests both that the claimed method will display data-entry fields dedicated
exclusively to obtaining dates or date ranges and that the data-entry fields displayed will be
only those required to generate the report type requested by the user. The specification and
drawings confirm this reading of the claim language. Figs. 8 and 9 are embodiments of a
“week-to-date report request screen.” D. 5-15-13 App. 80. The specification states that
- 10 -
“report date box 480 [in Fig. 8] accepts the date variables for the requested report, in the
format specified by the user. Depending on the report requested, there may be multiple
report date fields. The Week to Date report request of Fig. 8, however, requires only one
field.” Id. at 82 (bold font omitted). Fig. 15 “shows [a] Sales Mix Report request screen.”
Id. Unlike the week-to-date report request screen, “[t]he Sales Mix report . . . ask[s] for four
dates—current begin date, current end date, prior begin date, and prior end date.” Id. at 83.
5
Based on the claim language, the doctrine of claim differentiation as applied to claims
1(b) and 19, and the specification and drawings, the court concludes that “substantially only
those required to obtain” contains no limitation requiring that the selection operation
described in claim 1(b) (third indented paragraph) must be the only selection operation on
the page. The court holds that each of the selection operations described in claim 1(b) can
be displayed on the same page as either or both of the other selection operations described
in claim 1(b). The court also holds that “wherein the operative data-entry fields are
substantially only those required to obtain the dates or date ranges associated with the at least
one specified report format” means “wherein the operative data-entry fields are substantially
only those required to generate the type of custom report requested by the restaurant industry
user.”
Based on the foregoing construction and the summary judgment evidence, the court
denies InfoSync’s motion for partial summary judgment based on claim 1(b) (third indented
paragraph).
- 11 -
IV
InfoSync next moves for partial summary judgment based on claim 1(d).
A
In B-50 I the court addressed the parties’ dispute concerning the construction of the
term “to view or obtain” contained in claim 1(d), which states: “enabling the
restaurant-industry user to view or obtain the generated custom report using the Internet.”
P. 6-19-13 App. 90. Relying on InfoSync’s proposed construction, B-50’s position that the
term was self-explanatory and needed no construction, and the Federal Circuit’s decision in
Kustom Signals, Inc. v. Applied Concepts, Inc., 264 F.3d 1326, 1330-31 (Fed. Cir. 2001), the
court reached the following conclusion based on abbreviated reasoning:
InfoSync seeks a construction of “to view or obtain” to clarify
that it means “to either view or obtain, but not both.” B-50 does
not dispute this construction, but instead contends that the
phrase is self-explanatory and needs no construction. The court
concludes that the phrase “to view or obtain” should be
construed and that it means “to either view or obtain, but not
both.”
B-50 I, 2012 WL 4866508, *10 (internal citation omitted) (citing Kustom Signals, 264 F.3d
at 1330-31).
InfoSync moves for partial summary judgment on the ground that RVW “enables the
user in every instance to view and obtain the generated custom report.” D. 7-3-13 Br. at 2-3
(emphasis added). It maintains that, because RVW “enables the user to both view and obtain
the generated custom report,” it does not contain the “either view or obtain, but not both”
limitation recited in claim 1(d). B-50 responds that the court’s claim construction is “wrong
- 12 -
for two reasons.” P. 6-19-13 Br. 20. It contends that Kustom Signals does not control the
court’s construction of “or” because, unlike claim 1(d), the claim in Kustom Signals
contained “‘either or’ language.” Id.7
B
1
For the reasons that follow, the court concludes that its abbreviated claim construction
in B-50 I should be revised, see, e.g., Mikkelsen Graphic Eng’g, 2011 WL 1330782, at *5,
and, based on the revised construction of “to view or obtain,” that InfoSync is not entitled
to partial summary judgment.
The claim and specification neither define the word “or” nor do they indicate that B50 used the word in a specialized fashion. And there is no intrinsic evidence showing that
B-50 used the word “or” in claim 1(d) as a “technical term[] of art.” Brown v. 3M, 265 F.3d
1349, 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“Brown II”); see also Kustom Signals, 264 F.3d at 1331 (stating
that intrinsic evidence made clear that “or” was used “in its ordinary meaning”). The rules
that the court follows when construing patent terms are set out in B-50 I, 2012 WL 4866508,
at *1-2, and the court applies them when construing this term.
2
“Authorities agree that . . . or has an inclusive sense as well as an exclusive sense.”
Bryan A. Garner, Garner’s Dictionary of Legal Usage 639 (3d ed. 2011). In its inclusive
7
B-50 also contends that the court’s construction in B-50 I contains no time limitation.
The court need not reach this argument.
- 13 -
sense, “or” means “A or B, or both.” Id. In its exclusive sense, “or” means “A or B, but not
both.” Id. Although “or” is used in both senses in common usage, “[t]he meaning of or is
usually inclusive.” Id. (quoting Scott J. Burnham, The Contract Drafting Guidebook 163
(1992)) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Brown v. 3M, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
21630, at *11-12 (D. Ariz. Aug. 10, 2000) (“Brown I”) (“‘Or’ can be inclusive, describing
a list of alternative things in which one may choose one option or any combination of
alternative options. It can also be exclusive, forcing one to choose only one option from the
list of things that it conjoins.”), aff’d, 265 F.3d 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2001).
InfoSync argues as if the court must choose between construing “or” in its exclusive
sense or construing it to mean “and.” But the Federal Circuit has affirmed decisions
construing “or” in both its inclusive and exclusive senses. Compare Brown II, 265 F.3d at
1352, with Kustom Signals, 264 F.3d at 1331. Moreover, both senses of “or” are commonly
used. See Garner, supra, at 639. In fact, the inclusive use of “or” is the more common. See
id. Because “or” is commonly used in both its inclusive and exclusive senses, the court must
examine the claim language and the specification and drawings to determine the plain
meaning of “or” in claim 1(d).
3
Claim 1(d) states that it “enabl[es] the restaurant-industry user to view or obtain the
generated custom report using the Internet.” D. 5-15-13 App. 90. The claim language does
not contain an “either . . . or” clause or otherwise indicate that users of the claimed method
must “select” one, and only one, of two options. Cf. Kustom Signals, 264 F.3d at 1329-31.
- 14 -
The specification contains general descriptions of the ways a user can view or obtain
a report. The specification states that “[c]ommunication relay 40,” depicted in Fig. 1, “is
embodied in the Internet in its various forms and definitions, including e-mail and other
communication mechanisms. Of course, the invention contemplates using future generations
of the Internet, e-mail . . . and other new forms of electronic communication that may arise.”
D. 5-15-13 App. 80 (bold font omitted). The specification also provides that a “custom
report can be communicated by direct display at one of the computing devices, by e-mail to
a designated party, otherwise over the Internet, in hard copy, or in the other ways described
above.” Id. at 81 (emphasis added).8 This latter phrase appears to use “or” in its inclusive
sense. The natural reading of this part of the specification is that the method will provide
users several ways to receive reports using the Internet. It does not convey that users must
choose one, and only one, of these options.
The specification also contains specific descriptions of the ways a user can view or
obtain a report. For instance, if a user requests a report via web delivery, the specification
provides that the user can open the report by “click[ing]” the report’s “description” in the
“[d]escription column 280.” D. 5-15-13 App. 82 (bold font omitted). After the user clicked
the report, it would “appear[]” in the “lower portion of screen 210” (bold font omitted),
which is embodied in Fig. 6. Id. From there, the user could “click[]” a “print button,” which
8
As the court noted in its Markman opinion, the specification makes clear that “as
technology advances, the invention likely will use other modes of communication and
interaction with the Internet.” B-50 I, 2012 WL 4866508, at *3 (quoting ‘851 patent
specification now found at D. 5-15-13 App. 81).
- 15 -
would open a “[p]rint parameters” page. Id. In this way, the user could view and then obtain
the report using the Internet. Instead of clicking on the report immediately, the user could
“click[]” the “forward button 230” (bold font omitted) in the report detail area. After the user
clicked the forward button, the specification provides that the “report will be forwarded by
e-mail or other desired communication method.” Id. If the user then opened the e-mail
attachment, the user would have obtained and then viewed the report. Instead of that, the
user could open and view the report immediately, and then click the forward button, and later
open the e-mail attachment. In this way, the user would have viewed, then obtained, then
viewed the report using the Internet. These are just some of the combinations enabled by
claim 1(d).
This intrinsic evidence demonstrates that “or” as used in claim 1(d) should be
construed in its inclusive sense. The claimed method enables users to view a report using
the Internet, to obtain a report using the Internet, or to do both in whatever order the user
chooses. Nothing in the claim or specification and drawings indicates that users must choose
one or the other, but not both.
4
Based on the claim language, and the specification and drawings, the court concludes
that claim 1(d) means “enabling the restaurant industry user to view or obtain the generated
custom report, or both, using the Internet.” The court “is not replacing ‘or’ with ‘and.’”
Brown I, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21630, at *11. Instead, the court concludes that “or” as
used in claim 1(d) is used in its primary, inclusive sense.
- 16 -
*
*
*
Based on the foregoing term constructions and the summary judgment evidence, the
court holds that a reasonable jury could find that RVW directly infringes the ‘851 patent.
The court therefore denies InfoSync’s motion for partial summary judgment.
SO ORDERED.
January 27, 2014.
_________________________________
SIDNEY A. FITZWATER
CHIEF JUDGE
- 17 -
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?