Thursday, September 18, 2014

Prestige Jewelry v. BK Jewelry - Diamond Cuts are Non-Functional

On Monday, Chief Judge Preska of the Southern District of New York handed down a fascinating summary judgment decision in an epic design patent feud between Prestige Jewelry and BK Jewelry.  The decision covers a great deal of design patent law, which Judge Preska navigates quite nicely.  Students and practitioners of design patent law would be wise to read this decision which provides an excellent overview of design patent law, generally.   

There's too much to comment on in this 52-page decision, but I would like to single out the discussion of functionality.  As we've said before on this blog, true functionality arguments are rare in design patent cases, but for some reason design patent defendants keep gravitating towards functionality like a moth to the flame.  This case is another classic example of a functionality argument that probably never should have been raised.  

BK's U.S. Design Patent No. 618,132 covers a diamond arrangement with a relatively larger "full-cut" diamond in the center, surrounded by 9 smaller single cut diamonds:


Those who have been married in the last five years might recognize this design, as the decision suggests it has been wildly popular.  

Prestige's theory of functionality really had more to do with the design process than the design itself.  Apparently, the inventor, Rocky Wong, testified that "he used a 'light box' to conduct 'refraction tests' and determined that, in his opinion, the 'full-cut center stone' surrounded by nine single-cut stones 'looked the best.'"  "Wong also agreed that the ‘132 Patent arrangement 'performed the best' because 'it had the best refraction.'"

While such testimony would clearly be relevant to the question of functionality in the trade dress context, it doesn't have the same bearing on design patent functionality.  Even assuming that the design of the '132 Patent was perfect (i.e. it provided the most potential refraction), the luster of the gem is not a function in the design patent context, it is an aesthetic effect.  All designs are intended to be as pleasing as possible, using the fundamental elements of human perception - color, brightness, texture, shape, etc.  Perfecting the perception of a design is inherently aesthetic, not functional, and Chief Judge Preska correctly granted summary judgment of non-functionality on this basis:
This argument incorrectly blurs the distinction between ornamental and functional designs. Admittedly, Wong sometimes described the design of the ‘132 Patent in language that superficially might suggest a functional design. He admitted that his design “performed the best” and stated that he used a light box to test various arrangements in search of the “best refraction.” (Wong Dep. Tr., at 74:4-9.) But these statements do not change the fact that the ultimate purpose of the ‘132 Patent design is to have a pleasing appearance—a quintessentially ornamental purpose. Simply because an inventor experiments with alternative designs or uses rudimentary tools and tests does not mean the resulting design is functional. Presumably, most designs are developed not on a whim but rather through some process of trial and error—whether by using a light box, consumer surveys, or simply taking a few steps back and squinting at the design from a distance. The relevant inquiry is the nature of the design, not how the design was developed. Here, the design of the ‘132 Patent is unquestionably ornamental—it is cluster of diamonds arranged solely to be pleasing to the eye.
Prestige Jewelry v. BK Jewelry, No. 1:11-cv-02930, at 32-33 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 15, 2014).

As Chief Judge Preska reasoned, design patent functionality has nothing to do with a scientific design process.  Functionality depends on whether the article of manufacture has a utilitarian function, and whether the design claimed in the patent is dictated by that utilitarian function.  

There are lots of other great design patent nuggets in Chief Judge Preska's decision, including claim construction, reexamination, obviousness, infringement, and prior art.  It will be interesting to see what happens at the trial in this case.  Non-infringement may depend on how well the jury can distinguish between single-cut and full-cut diamonds so jury selection will be key.  We will keep an eye on this interesting saga, which is drawing to a close, and provide an update after trial. 

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Doorman v. Paccar - For Design Patents, Inter Partes Review is Non-Functional

Sometimes lawyers learn more from their failures than their successes, and this has proven to be true in the context of inter partes review of design patents.  Since the Patent Trial and Appeal Board launched the IPR program in 2012, there have been only a handful of design patent decisions, but with each new decision, we learn a bit more about how the PTAB will approach design patents. 

Last Friday, the PTAB handed down a decision in Doorman Prods., Inc. v. Paccar, Inc., IPR2014-00542, 2014 WL 4444041 (Patent Tr. & App. Bd. Sept. 5, 2014).  In its decision, the Board denied Doorman's Petition to institute an inter partes review, but it is the Board's reasoning that was noteworthy.  Below is an image from Paccar's U.S. Patent No. 525,731, which was the subject of the petition. 


First, the Board categorically rejected Doorman's request to filter out functional elements within the design in the context of claim construction.  The Board curiously found that the "Petitioner conflates invalidity based on functionality under 35 U.S.C. § 171 with invalidity based on obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103" and held that the it had no authority to entertain a functionality challenge to the design patent:
Further, a challenge based on functionality under 35 U.S.C. § 171 is not permitted in an inter partes review because it is not based on 35 U.S.C. § 103 nor is it based on prior art that consists of a patent or printed publication. 35 U.S.C. § 311(b); 37 C.F.R. § 42.105(b)(2). Therefore, we agree with Patent Owner that the allegedly functional elements identified by Petitioner (Pet. 12) must be considered in an obviousness analysis of the visual impression created by the patented design as a whole (Prelim. Resp. 26). 
Id. at  *3.

The Board appears to have badly misconstrued the Petitioner's claim construction argument with an invalidity challenge under § 171.  The Board's decision to construe the Petitioner's claim construction argument as a validity argument seems to be out of step with the Board's requirement to apply the "broadest reasonable construction."  Furthermore, it directly contradicts the Federal Circuit's guidance on design patent claim construction.  See OddzOn Prods., Inc. v. Just Toys, Inc., 122 F.3d 1396, 1405 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (if "a design contains both functional and non-functional elements, the scope of the claim must be construed in order to identify the non-functional aspects of the design.").  Whatever the "broadest reasonable construction" means in design patent cases before the PTAB, it must at least be as broad as the construction that would be provided in the context of a district court litigation.  

The Patent Office's failure to appreciate how design patents are being construed in the district courts has led to a strange double standard wherein design patents are construed much more narrowly at the Patent Office then they are in litigation.  IPR may be an interesting venue for bringing this issue to a head and encouraging the Patent Office and the Board to consider modernizing its view of the broadest reasonable construction for designs, in light of how they are being construed, in practice. 

In Doorman, the Board's failure to consider functionality in the context of claim construction led to disastrous results for the Petitioner.  The Board ultimately concluded that the Petitioner's primary reference, Kobayashi, "does not include a side Lamp D, striations, and a checkered surface pattern as shown in the patented design," id. at *5, and therefore could not serve as a primary reference.    But these were the same features that Doorman argued were functional in claim construction.  Whatever the merits of the Petitioner's functionality argument were, they appeared to be central to its Petition, and the Board's refusal to even consider filtering out functional elements would appear to be a clear error of law.  

Nevertheless, while Doorman remains the law of the PTAB, design patent practitioners would be wise not to rely on PTAB claim construction to filter out functional elements of design patent in IPR Petitions.  

For those who are curious, below is an image of Paccar's '731 Patent alongside the proposed primary reference, U.S. Design Patent No. 498,859 to Kobayashi.  Basically the same?




Friday, September 5, 2014

Isolite Systems v. Zirc Dental Products - Arguing Invalidity in a Motion to Dismiss

On Tuesday, September 2nd, Judge David O. Carter in the Central District of California issued an interesting order on a Motion to Dismiss in Innerlite, Inc. d/b/a/ Isolite Sys. v. Zirc Dental Prods., Inc., et al., (No. 13-cv-7501-DOC). The relevant discussion concerns the Defendants' allegations that the asserted design patent is invalid.


The case concerns U.S. Design Patent No. D615,203.  The patent is assigned to Plaintiff Isolite Systems, and claims the ornamental features of a device for use by dental professionals to isolate the work area of a patient's mouth, retract the tongue and cheek, evacuate fluids and oral debris, and prevent inadvertent aspiration of material.  Defendant Zirc Dental Products manufactures and distributes "Mr. Thirsty," which Isolite alleges infringes the D'203 Patent.  A figure derived from the D'203 Patent is shown above, along side an image of the "Mr. Thirsty" product from Zirc Dental.

The bulk of the Court's order relates to issues that are germane to motions to dismiss in patent litigation.  In addition to the claims against Zirc Dental, Isolite's complaint recited claims of direct and indirect infringement of the D'203 Patent against Defendants Dr. Brian P. Black, the alleged designer of the product that Zirc Dental markets as the "Mr. Thirsty,"  as well as claims against two companies allegedly owned by Dr. Black, Brian P. Black DDS, Inc. and Joogatech, Inc. These Defendants filed the instant motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, arguing that the complaint fails to state its claim for direct infringement against Joogatech, and its claims of induced infringement against all three of the so-called "Dr. Black Defendants."  The court agreed, and dismissed these claims without prejudice to Isolite.

The Defendants threw one additional argument into the mix: that the D'203 Patent infringement claims should be dismissed because the patent is invalid for being primarily functional, not ornamental. 

A patent can rarely be invalidated in a motion to dismiss.  At that stage in the litigation, the court's review is limited to the contents of the complaint and the material submitted with the complaint, although the court may still take judicial notice of outside facts which are generally known or whose accuracy is unquestioned.  Furthermore, all of the Plaintiff's factual allegations are assumed to be true for the purpose of this motion, and under these facts the Defendant must prove invalidity by clear and convincing evidence.  It is a very difficult case to make.

However, because invalidating a patent on a motion to dismiss is rare does not mean it is impossible.  In 2013, the Federal Circuit left this door open where "the only plausible reading of the patent must be that there is clear and convincing evidence of ineligibility."  Ultramercial, Inc. v. Hulu, LLC, 722 F.3d 1335, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2013).  This may be particularly useful design patent patent defendants, because, as we discussed in greater detail earlier this year, design patents claim individual ornamental designs rather than a "range" of inventions.  Therefore in many cases, the only plausible reading of the design patent will be apparent at the time the complaint is filed.  This could put defendants in a better position to raise clear invalidity issues early, before the burden of litigation becomes too great.

Unfortunately for the Defendants in this case, Judge Carter found this was not the "rare" instances where invalidity could be determined from the facts pled in the complaint.  The Defendants argued that Isolite failed to identify anything non-functional in the D'203 patent.  But the burden was on the Defendants, not Isolite, to affirmatively prove invalidity by clear and convincing evidence.

While the Defendants could not prove invalidity here, this case still demonstrates that a motion to dismiss can pose a tangible threat to design patent plaintiffs.  Invalidation may be rare, defendants should not overlook this device where other defenses, including non-infringement, may be proven on the complaint alone.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Pacific Coast v. Malibu Boats - The Nightmare Apportionment Scenario Realized

Last Friday we commented on Professor Lemley's amicus brief in the Apple v. Samsung case, which addresses the issue of apportionment in design patent law.   Apparently,  Judge John Antoon II of the Middle District of Florida was working on his own "post" on design patent apportionment at the same time.  Last Friday, Judge Antoon issued a decision denying Malibu's motions for summary judgment, including a motion to limit potential damages to the profits for the accused windshields in the case of Pacific Coast Marine Windshields, Ltd. v. Malibu Boats, LLC.  As a result of Judge Antoon's decision Malibu's total profits for the sale of its speedboats will be at risk if they are found to have infringed Pacific Coast's design patent on a boat windshield.  

Here's a graphic to help explain the decision:


You might recall this case from its previous trip to the Federal Circuit, where the court reversed Judge Antoon's decision to apply prosecution history estoppel to limit Pacific Coast's claims against Malibu. While the Federal Circuit held that prosecution history estoppel applies to design patent, the court reversed the district court’s summary judgment of non-infringement because it found that the accused design was not within the scope of the subject matter surrendered during prosecution.


It is unclear why Malibu Boats did not renew its motion for summary judgment on remand.  Although its prosecution history estoppel argument had been defeated, it still had strong non-infringement arguments as a result of the Federal Circuit's decision.  For example, if, as the Federal Circuit says, the accused windshield was not within the scope of the canceled figure,  then how could the accused windshield be within the scope of the remaining figures of the '070 Patent?  The accused design appears to be more similar to the cancelled figure than the asserted design, and that fact might have been enough for Judge Antoon to grant summary judgment. 

Malibu's decision not to renew its motion for summary judgment on non-infringement may cost them. Judge Antoon's decision on Friday was a simple matter of statutory interpretation.  The court found that its hands were tied in light of the statutory history of § 289:

Congress removed the apportionment requirement in 1887, with the enactment of what later became§ 289.  [See Nike. Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores. Inc., 138 F.3d 1437, 1441 (Fed. Cir. 1998)]. Design patent owners are no longer required “to apportion the infringer's profits between the patented design and the article bearing the design.” Id. at 1442.  The intent of Congress to allow more expansive recovery for design patent owners is exhibited in the plain language of the statute, which allows recovery of "total profit" from anyone who sells “any article of manufacture to which such design or colorable imitation has been applied.” 35 U.S.C. § 289.  In this case, Malibu sells boats, to which patented windshields have been applied. The plain language and intent of the statute support a conclusion that Pacific is entitled to Malibu's profits from the sale of its boats with the windshield.
This reading of § 289 is further supported by Federal Circuit and district court decisions. In Nike, the Federal Circuit referred to the damages as profits from "the infringing shoes" when the patent involved only part of the shoe. 138 F .3d at 144 7. In Apple. Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co., the plaintiff had several patents pertaining to smartphones and tablet computers that claimed a portion of the design of particular electronic devices but disclaimed other portions. 678 F.3d 1314, 1317 (Fed. Cir. 2012). With respect to damages based on the defendant's profits, the district court ruled that the plaintiff was not required to prove which portions of the profits were earned by the design feature. Apple. Inc. v. Samsung Elecs. Co., 926 F. Supp. 2d 1100, 1111 (N.D. Cal. 2013). "Congress specifically drafted the design patent remedy provisions to remove an apportionment requirement that the Supreme Court had imposed. Thus, there is simply no apportionment requirement for infringer's profits in design patent infringement under § 289." Id.
While Judge Antoon's legal analysis is correct, the case of Pacific Coast v. Malibu Boats is a striking example of the sometimes inequitable result of § 289 in the absence of any equitable discretion in the hands of the Court.  Malibu's boats sell for anywhere between $50,000 and nearly $100,000, while the accused windshields cannot possibly cost more than a few hundred dollars, standing alone.  This is precisely the type of inequitable scenario that Professor Lemley highlighted in his amicus brief and is the type of situation that the Federal Circuit must grapple with in the appeal from the Apple v. Samsung case. 

Friday, August 22, 2014

Design Patent Apportionment - The Answer Lies in Copyright Law

On Thanksgiving last year, we wrote about the apportionment problem in design patent cases by analogizing to a thanksgiving favorite, turducken.  The apportionment problem deals with how courts should award "total profits" for design patent infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 289 when the infringing design is only one of many profitable features in the infringing product.  For example, in the Apple v. Samsung case (now on appeal), Samsung maintains that its accused Galaxy devices were profitable, at least in part, because of their functionality and software, not just Apple’s patented designs which it was found to have infringed.

As promised, the issue of design patent apportionment has reared its ugly head in Samsung's appeal to the Federal Circuit in the Apple v. Samsung case.  I recently had an opportunity to read the "Brief Amici Curiae of 27 Law Professors In Support of Appellant Samsung," which is available on the AIPLA web page for the industrial design committee.  I found Professor Lemley's brief to be well reasoned and persuasive and I think the Federal Circuit will have some tough decisions to make when it comes to the apportionment issue.  Two things in the Amicus Brief jumped out at me and my take on the apportionment problem differs only slightly from Professor Lemley's.

First, as professor Lemley appears to concede, the statutory history relating to § 289 is not easily ignored.  Congress specifically removed the apportionment requirement from the disgorgement remedy in response to a Supreme Court case that applied apportionment in such a way that it basically declawed the disgorgement remedy.  In Dobson v. Carpet Co., 114 U.S. 439 (1885), the Supreme Court held that a design patent plaintiff must be required to establish the profits attributable to the infringing design and, because there was no evidence the patented designs at issue had contributed to the profits of the infringing carpets, the Supreme Court reversed and awarded only nominal damages. See id. Congress then passed the statute of 1887 in response to the Dobson decision. "The manifest purpose of congress was to enlarge the remedy against infringers of design patents, and to declare that the measure of profits recoverable on account of the infringement should be considered to be the total net profits upon the whole article."  Untermeyer v. Freund, 58 F. 205 (2d Cir. 1893) (emphasis added); see also Nike, Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 138 F.3d 1437, 1441 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“The Act of 1887, specific to design patents, removed the apportionment requirement when recovery of the infringer’s profit was sought….”).  This clear statutory history and legislative intent will be difficult for Samsung to overcome and nearly impossible for the Federal Circuit to ignore.  

While I agree that "awarding a defendant’s entire profits makes no sense in the modern world," the same could be said of the minimum $250 remedy that is also available under § 289.  In the modern world, a design patent holder will spend more in a single billable hour of design patent litigation than it could ever hope to recoup under this provision.  Yet, federal courts are incompetent to update § 289 so as to increase this minimum monetary award to a more modern amount.  Courts are equally incompetent to read apportionment back into § 289 after Congress deliberately removed it. 

Second, the Amicus Brief notes that the "closest analogue" for the disgorgement remedy in § 289 is found in the remedies for trademark infringement.  On this point, I would disagree.  The disgorgement remedy in design patent cases is a close cousin of the disgorgement remedy under copyright law.  See Sheldon v. Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp., 309 U.S. 390, 399 (1940) ("Prior to the Copyright Act of 1909..., there had been no statutory provision for the recovery of profits, but that recovery had been allowed in equity both in copyright and patent cases as appropriate equitable relief incident to a decree for an injunction."); Braun Inc. v. Dynamics Corp. of Am., 975 F. 2d 815, 824 (Fed. Cir. 1992) ("R]ecovery of an infringer's profits evolved in courts of equity").  Indeed, § 504 of the Copyright Act still uses language that is virtually identical to the disgorgement remedy in design patent law prior to Congress's decision to remove apportionment. See 17 U.S.C. § 504(b) ("The copyright owner is entitled to recover ... any profits of the infringer that are attributable to the infringement") (emphasis added).  Thus, Congress chose to require apportionment under copyright law in 1909, twelve years after deliberately removing the same language from the design patent statute.  This is strong evidence that § 289 and § 504 are intentionally different and the courts should not interpret these statutes as requiring the same things.  

However, copyright law may still provide the solution to the problem of apportionment in design patent cases.  The Copyright Act expressly provides for infringer's profits as a remedy for copyright infringement and expressly requires that such profits be apportioned.  However, courts have  uniformly interpreted § 504 as requiring a threshold showing by the plaintiff that there is a nexus between the infringer's gross profits and the infringement.  See, e.g. Polar Bear Productions, Inc. v. Timex Corp., 384 F.3d 700, 711 (9th Cir. 2004) (“Thus, a copyright owner is required to do more initially than toss up an undifferentiated gross revenue number; the revenue stream must bear a legally significant relationship to the infringement.”); Bouchat v. Baltimore Ravens Football Club, Inc., 346 F.3d 514, 522 (4th Cir. 2003) (“In sum, we conclude that the Defendants could properly be awarded summary judgment...if...there exists no conceivable connection between the infringement and those revenues....”); On Davis v. The Gap, 246 F.3d 152, 160 (2d Cir. 2001) (“[W]e think the term ‘gross revenue’ under the statute means gross revenue reasonably related to the infringement, not unrelated revenues.”); Taylor v. Meirick, 712 F.2d 1112, 1122 (7th Cir. 1983) (“It was not enough to show [Defendant]’s gross revenues from the sale of everything he sold....”).  Indeed, the Federal Circuit, itself, has already applied this rule of law in the copyright context.  See The University of Colorado Foundation, Inc. v. American Cyanamid Co., 196 F.3d 1366, 1375 (Fed. Cir. 1999) ("The University's argument presumes that the sales of reformulated Materna were due to Cyanamid's copyright infringement. The University had the burden to show this connection.").  

The nexus requirement in copyright law is a judicially created, threshold requirement before the infringer's profits become available at all.  It has nothing to do with the statutory apportionment required under § 504 if disgorgement is found to be an appropriate remedy.  See Andreas v. Volkswagen of Am., Inc., 336 F.3d 789, 796 (8th Cir. 2003) (“burden of establishing that profits are attributable to the infringed work often gets confused with the burden of apportioning profits between various factors contributing to the profits”) (emphasis added).  Under copyright law, where the gross profits do not bear "a legally significant relationship to the infringement," the disgorgement remedy is unavailable and apportionment is simply irrelevant. 

There is no good reason why § 289 should not be interpreted as requiring this same threshold showing that the total profits bear "a legally significant relationship to the infringement."  Such an interpretation of § 289 would not impinge on Congress' clear intent that profits not be apportioned under § 289 and would honor the equitable roots of the disgorgement remedy for both design patent infringement and copyright infringement.  Under § 289, upon a threshold showing of a "a legally significant relationship to the infringement," a design patent infringer would be liable to the extent of their total profits, whereas under § 504, the court would then be required to apportion the infringer's profits.  When "a legally significant relationship" between the design patent infringement and the profits cannot be proved, the patent would still be permitted to recover their damages pursuant to § 284.

This interpretation of § 289 would also address the inequitable scenarios cited by Professor Lemley in the Amicus Brief, without improperly re-interpreting § 289 to include the same apportionment requirement that Congress has already deleted.  See Amicus Brief at 12 ("If United Airlines uses a patented part in one of its planes, the patent owner cannot simply point to that infringement and say, “Now I am entitled to the entire profit from all aspects of United Airlines.”).  Under this scenario, the patentee would likely be unable to show "a legally significant relationship" between United Airline's gross profits and its infringement of a single patented part and disgorgement would not be available as a remedy at all.  Samsung's infringement of Apple's Iphone design patents, however, presents a somewhat closer question as to whether there is a threshold nexus between the infringing design and Samsung's gross profits. 

Interpreting § 289 to require a threshold showing of a nexus between the patented design and the infringer's profits would honor the equitable roots of the disgorgement remedy and bring the interpretation of § 289 in line with its equitable cousin, § 504 of the Copyright Act.  This proposed interpretation would also address the sometimes inequitable result of awarding "total profits," where those profits are not reasonably related to the infringing design.  While apportionment should not be permitted in design patent cases, in accordance with congressional intent, the Federal Circuit should use this opportunity to allow for this basic equitable consideration in design patent cases, as a threshold issue.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Judge Wright Gets it Right on Design Patent Claim Construction

On Friday, Judge Otis D. Wright issued an always-risky claim construction order in the case of Carlini Enterprises, Inc. v. Paul Yaffe Design, Inc., which we first reported on last October.  This case involves two design patents for bike handles which allegedly cover Carlini's "Evil Apes" and "Gangster Apes" handlebar designs, although Yaffe disputes this fact through its false marking counterclaim.  The design patents-in-suit are U.S. Design Patent Nos. 629,343 and 604,212, shown below:


As we have previously noted, claim construction in design patent cases has become a rather sticky issue since the Federal Circuit's en banc decision in Egyptian Goddess.  In that watershed case, the Federal Circuit famously did away with the old “point of novelty” test, returning the ordinary observer test to its rightful place as the sole test for design patent infringement.  See Egyptian Goddess, Inc. v. Swisa, Inc., 543 F.3d 665, 679 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (en banc).  However, in a less noted portion of the Egyptian Goddess decision, the Federal Circuit opined on the issue of claim construction, stating that “the preferable course ordinarily will be for a district court not to attempt to ‘construe’ a design patent claim by providing a detailed verbal description of the claim language.” Id.  The court reasoned that “a design is better represented by an illustration ‘than it could be by any description and a description would probably not be intelligible without the illustration.’”  Id. (quoting Dobson v. Dorman, 118 U.S. 10, 14 (1886)).

There is an implicit conflict between Egyptian Goddess and the Federal Circuit's other decisions regarding design patent claim construction, such as  OddzOn Prods., Inc. v. Just Toys, Inc., 122 F.3d 1396, 1405 (Fed. Cir. 1997), where the Court held that if "a design contains both functional and non-functional elements, the scope of the claim must be construed in order to identify the non-functional aspects of the design."  This contradicting guidance has left some courts confused as to when, if ever, it is appropriate to give  verbal claim construction regarding functionality.

In Carlini, Judge Wright struck a nuanced balance between the need to avoid unnecessary verbal claim constructions and the temptation to "filter" functional elements of a design patent out of the scope of the claim.  In declining to filter out any allegedly functional elements, Judge Wright reasoned that "the task of distinguishing the ornamental features from the functional ones must be tempered [because]a detailed verbal description of the claimed design may place an undue emphasis on particular features of the design and may hinder examination of the design as a whole." citing Crocs, Inc. v. ITC, 598 F.3d 1294, 1302 (Fed. Cir. 2010).

Yaffe had requested that the court filter out the three basic components of any motorcycle handle bars as functional, "parts, which Carlini refers to as the 'grips,' 'uprights,' and 'center section.'"  Judge Wright did not dispute that these three components provided functionality to the handlebars - "There is really no dispute that these parts provide some function. A rider must have something to hold onto—the grips—and there must be some point where the handlebar attaches to the motorcycle—the center section. The function of the uprights is to connect the grips to the center section."  However, he disagreed that evidence of function is synonymous with functionality in the design patent context and he cited the variety of bike handles available in the prior art, despite supplying this same basic functionality.

Moreover, the Court indicated that there would be no easy way to "filter out" the allegedly functional components of the handlebar, given the nature of the asserted design patents.  The Court reasoned that "it would be difficult for this Court to verbalize the design of the handlebars depicted in the patents-in-suit and separate the ornamental features from the functional ones. At the very least, a detailed verbal description would place undue emphasis on particular features of the claimed design."  The Court emphasized that "[t]he most important task is to facilitate examination of the design as a whole—ornamental and functional elements together."  (emphasis added).

In declining to issue a detailed verbal claim construction, Judge Wright appears to have struck the correct balance between the temptation to "filter out" functional elements while avoiding an unnecessary, detailed verbal claim construction.  Where, as here, the requested claim construction would impair a jury's ability to assess infringement of the claim "as a whole," the the proponent of such a construction should be required to come forth with clear evidence that the design elements are dictated by function alone.  Otherwise, such arguments are better handled in the context of a motion for summary judgment of invalidity based on functionality.  While it may still be appropriate to "filter out" purely functional design elements in the context of claim construction, such situations are rare and the resulting claim construction would always risk improperly affecting the jury's determination of infringement of the design patent "as a whole."

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Poly-America, L.P. v. API Industries, Inc., - Identifying the Ordinary Observer

Here at the Ordinary Observer (the blog), one of the things we enjoy discussing most is the Ordinary Observer (the legal fiction).  Today, that discussion is facilitated by an August 6, 2014 Order on a Motion for Reconsideration issued in Poly-America, L.P. v. API Industries, Inc. (No. 13-cv-693-SLR) by Judge Sue L. Robinson from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware.
 

The Order on a Motion for Reconsideration follows an earlier denial of a motion for judgment on the pleadings, issued on April 10, 2014. There, Judge Robinson declined to find, as a matter of law, that API's design for a cardboard box and Poly-America's patented box design were plainly dissimilar.  In reaching her decision, the judge found that the ordinary observer would be a person who sees the box when it is merchandised in a store, and not one who views the box in a manufacturing facility.  Judge Robinson's Order on the Motion for Reconsideration is a great review of how the ordinary observer is defined, and why it matter so much in design patent litigation.