Monthly Archives: January 2020

FEDERAL CIRCUIT SHEDS (SOME) LIGHT ON WHAT CONSITUTES A NEW ARGUMENT AT PTAB ORAL HEARING

By Siew Chong
A recent Federal Circuit decision in The Chamberlain Group, Inc v. One World Technologies, Inc. (Fed. Cir. December 17, 2019), is notable in that it clarifies what a patent owner may permissibly raise for the first time at an oral hearing. Despite acknowledging that Chamberlain argued a claim limitation for the first time at oral argument before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB), the Federal Circuit panel still found that the argument acceptable because the new citation merely clarified Chamberlain’s previously articulated position.

Nonetheless, the Federal Circuit panel affirmed a Patent Trial and Appeal Board’s final written decision that found claims 8-15 of U.S. Patent No. 7,196,611 (the ’611 patent) – directed to garage door and gate operator systems – unpatentable as anticipated by U.S. Patent No. 4,638,422 (Schindler). The challenged claims were directed to methods of “teaching” barrier movement systems, e.g., garage door systems, to set various limits for operating the systems. One World Technologies, Inc. successfully petitioned for the inter partes review of claims 8-15 in the ’611 patent for being anticipated by Schindler, and claims 23 and 25 for being obvious over the combination of Schindler and “Liftmaster,” an owner’s manual for a door operator system. One World Technologies asserted that Schindler disclosed a method that sets the upper and lower limits for door positions, and thus anticipates the challenged claims. Chamberlain disagreed, and stated in its patent owner’s response that contrary to Schindler, which taught programming a “single” activity at a time, the ’611 patent was directed to a system that required identifying and guiding “multiple activities.”

At the oral hearing, Chamberlain argued for the first time that the claim limitation for the final step of the learning mode, “responsive to the first and second identifying step,” required identifying multiple activities before transmitting any guidance responsive to the identifying step. That limitation, according to Chamberlain, was not anticipated by Schindler, which disclosed transmitting a guidance signal after identifying a single activity. In its final written decision, the Board found that Chamberlain waived this argument because it was raised for the first time at the oral hearing. The Board, however, went on to address the merits of the argument and ultimately found it unpersuasive.

In its appeal, Chamberlain asserted that the Board’s finding of waiver was erroneous because Chamberlain’s argument was responsive to new arguments made in One World’s petitioner reply, and the argument was merely a clarification of its position, which had been consistent throughout the IPR. The Federal Circuit panel agreed with Chamberlain, explaining Federal Circuit case law allows parties to “elaborate” their arguments on previously raised issues.   The panel found that Chamberlain did not raise new issues or evidence, but instead tracked its previous argument and “merely pointed to different portions of the claim language” to clarify its previously stated position in response to One World’s reply. Continue reading

2019 PTAB Year In Review Part IV: THE PRECEDENTIAL OPINION PANEL (POP)

The Precedential Opinion Panel (POP), formed in September 2018, began rendering opinions in 2019. The POP is intended to provide two main functions: rehear matters in pending trials and appeals of exceptional importance; and assist the Director in determining whether a previously issued decision should be designated as precedential or informative. Its decisions are binding authority on the PTAB. In 2019, the POP issued 3 decisions, designated 8 decisions as precedential, and designated another 13 decisions informative. The three POP decisions are summarized below.

In Proppant Express Investments LLC v. Oren Technologies LLC, IPR2018-00914 (March 2019; Paper 38, precedential), the POP addressed discretionary joinder under §315(c). The POP held that (a) a petitioner may be joined to a proceeding in which it is already a named party, and (b) new issues may be added to an existing proceeding, irrespective of whether the petitioner is already a named party. The POP also advised that the one-year time bar under 35 USC §315(b) is one of several factors to consider when exercising its discretion.

In GoPro Inc. v. 360Heroes Inc., IPR2018-01754 (August 2019; Paper 38, precedential), the POP addressed the one-year time bar under § 315(b). It concluded that § 315(b)’s language, “served with a complaint alleging infringement” is plain and unambiguous. Thus, the service of a pleading alleging patent infringement triggers the one-year time period for filing an IPR petition under 35 U.S.C. § 315(b), regardless of whether the serving party lacked standing to sue or the pleading was otherwise deficient.

Notably, six days after the POP issued the GoPro decision, it also designated as precedential the decision in Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Chrimar Systems, Inc. IPR2018-01511 (PTAB Jan. 2019; Paper 11, designated precedential August 2019).. In that case, the PTAB held that that § 315(a)(1) bars institution of an inter partes review of a patent in which petitioner voluntarily dismisses its earlier civil action challenging the validity of that patent prior to filing the petition.  Continue reading