Friday, September 12, 2008

Can You Hear me Now? The Next Big VoIP Patent Battle will be Fought in Tacoma

It's been almost a year since Vonage, industry pioneer in VoIP and (after going from $17 at IPO to $1) current poster child for patent reform, settled allegations of patent infringement made by Sprint and Nortel (stories here and here) and more than a year since it was hit with a $58 M judgment following a jury's verdict of infringement and a potentially devastating injunction resulting from patent infringement allegations made by Verizon (story here; this judgment was subsequently vacated in its entirety, but the battle between Verizon and Vonage rages on in the E.D. of Virginia).

The next big VoIP battle is set to take place right here in the WD of Washington, where Skype faces allegations of infringement of US Patent No. 7,099,304, covering Apparatus, Methods, and Systems for Anonymous Communication. The owner of the '304 patent is Vancouver, WA-based Flexiworld Technologies, the self-described "leader in wireless applications for mobile devices, including laptop PCs, PDAs, digital cameras, and mobile phones."
The case was filed in March, but not much has happened so far. I uploaded a copy of the complaint including the patent. I'll keep you posted as the case progresses.

skypecomplaint.pdf

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Friday, March 21, 2008

Bamboo Flooring Defendant Gets a Second Chance to State Fraud and Antitrust Defenses

Defendant Smith & Fong Company, a California provider of bamboo furniture and building products, including bamboo flooring under the name PLYBOO, was sued last December by Teragren, LLC for infringement of U.S. Patent No. 5,543,197, "Parallel Randomly Stranded Laminated Bamboo Boards and Beams." Smith & Fong denied infringement and counterclaimed for invalidity, inequitable conduct, and antitrust violations, among several other counterclaims and affirmative defenses. In total, Smith & Fong alleged six counterclaims and 20 affirmative defenses. At the core of their defense is an allegation that the '197 patent is invalid and that it was procured by a fraudulent misrepresentation as to inventorship. The counterclaims allege as follows:

[(The ‘197 patent)], allegedly exclusively licensed to Teragren, was obtained on inventions that not only had been widely known and publicized in the public domain well prior to the patent application date, but had been offered for sale in the public domain well prior to the patent application date. Most importantly, despite Teragren’s allegations, the bamboo stranded products offered in the US market do no infringe any of the claims of the ‘197 Patent.

***
The ‘197 Patent is, on information and belief, unenforceable because it was obtained through
misrepresentations and/or fraud on the United States Patent and Trademark Office. On information and belief, the putative inventor of the ‘197 Patent represented that he was the inventor with knowledge that subject matter of the claims of the ‘197 Patent was invented by another, and had previously been offered for sale by another in the United States.


In an order denying Teragren's motion to dismiss these allegations for failing to meet the minimum pleading requirements for inequitable conduct (fraud) in Rule 9(b), Judge Leighton (Tacoma) gave Smith & Fong a chance to amend their counterclaims to add specific facts supporting inequitable conduct, and to allege the requisite facts for an antitrust violation under the "sham litigation" exception to the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. With respect to the "sham litigation" claims, Judge Leighton states that Smith & Fong is required to allege that "1) the lawsuit [is] objectively meritless and 2) the baseless lawsuit conceals an attempt to interfere directly with the business relationship of [Smith &Fong]." With respect to claims for inequitable conduct, Smith & Fong is require to allege "precisely what conduct constituted fraud or how such conduct was a deliberate scheme to defraud the U.S. Patent Office."

Whether Smith & Fong can adequately make these allegations in an amended pleading consistent with its obligations under Rule 11 remains to be seen.
TaragrenOrderMDismiss.pdf

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Judge Settle (Tacoma) Stays Patent Case Pending Reexamination

U.S. District Court Judge, Benjamin Settle (nominated by George W. Bush on January 9, 2007, to a seat vacated by Franklin D. Burgess; Confirmed by the Senate on June 28, 2007, and received commission on July 2, 2007) recently stayed a dispute involving U.S. Patent Nos. 5,993,303 and 6,250,998, patents for hand-held cutting tools.

The dispute is between Pactool International, Ltd and DeWalt Industrial Tool Co., as well as Kett Tool Company (Case No. 06-5367). Judge Settle granted Kett Tool Company's motion to stay in view of a request for reexamination that was filed on December 20, 2007. While the PTO has not yet granted Kett's request for reexamination, Judge Settle stayed the case anyway, calling for a stay until May 1, 2008, and permitting the parties to file a motion to lift the stay in the event the PTO denies Kett's request for reexamination.
PactoolOrderStay.pdf

Labels: , , , , , ,