Openwave Systems, Inc. v. Apple Inc. , 808 F.3d 509 ( 2015 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC., NKA UNWIRED
    PLANET, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    APPLE INC., RESEARCH IN MOTION, LTD.,
    RESEARCH IN MOTION CORP.,
    Defendants-Appellees
    ______________________
    2015-1108
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    District of Delaware in No. 1:11-cv-00765-RGA, Judge
    Richard G. Andrews.
    ______________________
    Decided: December 15, 2015
    ______________________
    THEODORE STEVENSON, III, McKool Smith, P.C.,
    Dallas, TX, argued for appellant. Also represented by
    MEREDITH ANNE ELKINS, JARED M. HOGGAN, NICHOLAS M.
    MATHEWS; DANIEL L. GEYSER, Stris & Maher LLP, Los
    Angeles, CA.
    MARK ANDREW PERRY, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP,
    Washington, DC, argued for appellee Apple Inc. Also
    represented by BRIAN BUROKER; ALEXANDER N. HARRIS,
    San Francisco, CA; JOSH KREVITT, New York, NY; HERVEY
    2                      OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.
    MARK LYON, STUART ROSENBERG, Palo Alto, CA; BROOKE
    MYERS WALLACE, Los Angeles, CA.
    ALAN J. HEINRICH, Irell & Manella LLP, Los Angeles,
    CA, for appellees Research in Motion, Ltd. and Research
    in Motion Corp. Also represented by GAVIN SNYDER,
    BRUCE A. WESSEL.
    ______________________
    Before MOORE, O’MALLEY, and CHEN, Circuit Judges.
    O’MALLEY, Circuit Judge.
    Openwave Systems, Inc., NKA Unwired Planet, Inc.
    (“Unwired Planet”) is the assignee of U.S. Patent Nos.
    6,405,037 (“the ’037 patent”), 6,430,409 (“the ’409 pa-
    tent”), and 6,625,447 (“the ’447 patent”) (collectively, the
    “patents-in-suit”). The patents-in-suit share a common
    specification. 1
    Unwired Planet first sued Apple Inc., Research in Mo-
    tion, Ltd., and Research in Motion Corp. (collectively, the
    “Defendants”) on August 31, 2011, in the United States
    District Court for the District of Delaware. Shortly there-
    after, on October 7, 2011, Unwired Planet initiated an
    action with the International Trade Commission (“ITC”).
    The district court stayed its litigation pending resolution
    of the ITC proceedings. After receiving an unfavorable
    claim construction ruling from the Administrative Law
    Judge (“ALJ”) overseeing the proceedings, Unwired
    Planet sought to dismiss the ITC investigation in its
    entirety. On November 13, 2012, the ITC terminated its
    proceedings. The district court lifted its stay on December
    28, 2012.
    1  The patents-in-suit are all continuations of U.S.
    Patent No. 5,808,415, which was filed on December 11,
    1995.
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.                   3
    Unwired Planet informed the district court that if it
    adopted a construction of the disputed claim term that
    matched the construction from the ITC proceedings,
    Unwired Planet would concede non-infringement by
    stipulation and file a motion to terminate the case. After
    considering the briefing and hearing oral argument, the
    district court issued an order adopting a construction that
    closely tracked that employed by the ALJ. Believing one
    difference between the two constructions to be material,
    however, Unwired Planet did not immediately stipulate to
    non-infringement. Specifically, because the district court
    noted in a footnote that its construction excluding devices
    employing “computer modules” did not exclude devices
    employing “microprocessors,” Unwired Planet argued that
    a material question regarding infringement remained
    unresolved.
    Given Unwired Planet’s refusal to concede non-
    infringement, Defendants filed a motion for summary
    judgment of non-infringement. The district court denied
    the Defendants’ motion on the ground that it was unclear
    from the record whether the accused products actually fell
    within the claims as construed. The district court prem-
    ised its summary-judgment ruling on the fact that it
    found the distinction between devices operating with
    microprocessors and those operating with computer
    modules to be sufficiently unclear at that stage of the
    proceedings to prohibit entry of a judgment of non-
    infringement as a matter of law. After the district court
    entered that order in favor of Unwired Planet, however,
    Unwired Planet changed course and filed a stipulation of
    non-infringement after all. The district court entered
    final judgment of non-infringement as to all asserted
    patent claims in favor of Defendants on October 14, 2014.
    This appeal followed. Because we agree with the district
    court’s claim construction, we affirm.
    4                      OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.
    BACKGROUND
    There are three claim terms at issue: “mobile device”
    in the ’037 patent, “wireless mobile telephone” in the ’409
    patent, and “two-way communication device” in the ’447
    patent. Before both the ALJ and the district court, the
    parties agreed that the claim terms should be analyzed
    and construed together. Accordingly, we will construe
    them together under the umbrella term “mobile device.”
    The only relevant issue on appeal is whether the
    claims should be given their ordinary meaning or wheth-
    er, as the district court found, the patents, through re-
    peated disparagement in the specification, disclaim
    mobile devices containing “computer modules.”
    The patents-in-suit address perceived problems with
    the mobile device prior art. For example, the prior art
    “intelligent devices” 2 could not be updated without physi-
    cally changing the devices themselves because, at the
    time of the invention, applications on mobile devices were
    physically burned onto their read-only memories
    (“ROMs”) at the factory or were present on a ROM card.
    In order to install a new application, one would need to
    re-burn the ROM or install a new ROM card. ’037 patent
    col. 2 ll. 33–40. The “intelligent telephone” of the day,
    moreover, was too big in size, too expensive to produce,
    and had problems with battery life. 
    Id. at col.
    9 ll. 21–25.
    At the time of the invention—1995—mobile devices did
    not have processors that were both powerful enough and
    small enough to operate the devices without running into
    these commercialization problems.
    2      The prior art “intelligent communication devic-
    es . . . include both the hardware necessary for a computer
    module and the hardware for a wireless communications
    module.” ’037 patent col. 1 ll. 55–58.
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.                      5
    To overcome these difficulties, the inventor of the pa-
    tents-in-suit “devised ways to divide the computing power
    between a device and its remote server,” thus “elimi-
    nat[ing] the need for devices to employ full computing
    capacity on their own.” Unwired Planet Op. Br. 2. At
    issue is whether the claims cover only mobile devices with
    small “microcontrollers”—which facilitate communica-
    tions between the client device and the server—or also
    cover mobile devices that contain more robust “computer
    modules”—which serve to localize more of the computa-
    tional processes onto the mobile device itself. 3
    In answering this question, the district court found
    that “the specification makes clear that the invention does
    not encompass mobile devices containing computer mod-
    ules.” Openwave Sys., Inc. v. Apple Inc., No. CV-11-765-
    RGA, 
    2014 WL 651911
    , at *3 (D. Del. Feb. 19, 2014). The
    3    The specification of the patents-in-suit specifies
    that a “client module” is executed on the “microcontrol-
    ler.” ’037 patent col. 6 ll. 65–66. The lightweight “client
    module” and the “microcontroller” of the patents-in-suit
    are distinguishable from the more robust “computer
    module” in terms of relative computing power. Although
    the district court noted that the distinction between
    “microcontrollers” on the one hand and “computer mod-
    ules” on the other is not clear (Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 10),
    we need not seek an exact dividing line where, as here,
    the patentee has stipulated to noninfringement under a
    claim construction that explicitly relies on this distinction.
    That is, if the distinction between “microcontroller” and
    “computer module” is clear enough for the patentee to
    stipulate that the accused devices do not infringe because
    they employ the latter, as that term was construed by the
    district court, it is clear enough for this court to apply the
    respective terms without the need to remand for addition-
    al factual determinations.
    6                       OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.
    district court relied upon a number of passages in the
    specification that disparage the prior art implementation
    of a computer module on a mobile device, finding that the
    “repeated derogatory statements . . . reasonably may be
    viewed as a disavowal of that subject matter from the
    scope of the [p]atent’s claims.” 
    Id. (alterations in
    original)
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing Chicago Bd.
    Options Exch., Inc. v. Int’l Sec. Exch., LLC, 
    677 F.3d 1361
    ,
    1372 (Fed. Cir. 2012)). Accordingly, “[t]he patents dis-
    claim mobile devices containing computer modules.” Id.;
    see also J.A. 9 (specifying that “[t]he patents disclaimed
    mobile devices containing computer modules”).
    In light of this disavowal, the district court construed
    the term “mobile device” as “a portable wireless two-way
    communication device that does not contain a computer
    module.” Openwave, 
    2014 WL 651911
    , at *3. In a foot-
    note, the district court “ma[d]e clear that this construction
    does not read out embodiments including microcontrol-
    lers.” 
    Id. at n.3.
    As noted, after some hesitation, Unwired
    Planet ultimately stipulated to non-infringement under
    this construction. The district court then entered final
    judgment, from which Unwired Planet appeals. J.A. 17.
    We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
    DISCUSSION
    “Where, as here, a plaintiff concedes noninfringement
    by stipulation, we need only address the district court’s
    construction of the pertinent claims” and affirm the
    judgment if this court determines that the claim construc-
    tion is correct under the appropriate standard. Starhome
    GmbH v. AT&T Mobility LLC, 
    743 F.3d 849
    , 854 (Fed.
    Cir. 2014); see also Altiris, Inc. v. Symantec Corp., 
    318 F.3d 1363
    , 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (noting that “we need
    only address the district court’s construction of the
    claims” when a party stipulates to a judgment of non-
    infringement following a dispositive claim construction).
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.                     7
    We “review de novo the district court’s ultimate inter-
    pretation of the patent claims,” but apply “clear error
    review” to any necessary “subsidiary factfinding.” Teva
    Pharm. USA, Inc. v. Sandoz, Inc., 
    135 S. Ct. 831
    , 839–40
    (2015). Because the construction below was based entire-
    ly on intrinsic evidence, we review the issue de novo.
    The proper claim construction is “the meaning that
    the term would have to a person of ordinary skill in the
    art in question at the time of the invention, i.e., as of the
    effective filing date of the patent application.” Phillips v.
    AWH Corp., 
    415 F.3d 1303
    , 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en
    banc). The specification “is the single best guide to the
    meaning of a disputed term” and is usually “dispositive.”
    
    Id. at 1315
    (citation omitted). In particular, “the specifi-
    cation may reveal an intentional disclaimer, or disavowal,
    of claim scope by the inventor,” in which case “the inven-
    tor’s intention, as expressed in the specification, is re-
    garded as dispositive.” 
    Id. at 1316
    (citing SciMed Life
    Sys., Inc. v. Advanced Cardiovascular Sys., Inc., 
    242 F.3d 1337
    , 1343–44 (Fed. Cir. 2001)).
    “The standard for disavowal of claim scope
    is . . . exacting.” Thorner v. Sony Comput. Entm’t Am.
    LLC, 
    669 F.3d 1362
    , 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2012). Disavowal
    requires that “the specification make[] clear that the
    invention does not include a particular feature.” SciMed
    Life Sys., 
    Inc., 242 F.3d at 1341
    . To find disavowal, we
    must find that the specification is “both so clear as to
    show reasonable clarity and deliberateness, and so unmis-
    takable as to be unambiguous evidence of disclaimer.”
    Dealertrack, Inc. v. Huber, 
    674 F.3d 1315
    , 1322 (Fed. Cir.
    2012) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Omega
    Eng’g, Inc. v. Raytek Corp., 
    334 F.3d 1314
    , 1325–26 (Fed.
    Cir. 2003)).
    To find disavowal of claim scope through disparage-
    ment of a particular feature, we ask whether “the specifi-
    cation goes well beyond expressing the patentee’s
    8                       OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.    v. APPLE INC.
    preference . . . [such that] its repeated derogatory state-
    ments about [a particular embodiment] reasonably may
    be viewed as a disavowal.” Chicago Bd. Options Exch.,
    
    Inc., 677 F.3d at 1372
    ; see also SafeTCare Mfg., Inc. v.
    Tele-Made, Inc., 
    497 F.3d 1262
    , 1269–70 (Fed. Cir. 2007)
    (finding disclaimer where the specification repeatedly
    indicated that the invention operated by “pushing (as
    opposed to pulling) forces,” and then characterized the
    “pushing forces” as “an important feature of the present
    invention”). We note also that:
    A patent that discloses only one embodiment is
    not necessarily limited to that embodiment.
    Saunders Grp., Inc. v. Comfortrac, Inc., 
    492 F.3d 1326
    , 1332 (Fed. Cir. 2007). “[I]t is improper to
    read limitations from a preferred embodiment de-
    scribed in the specification—even if it is the only
    embodiment—into the claims absent a clear indi-
    cation in the intrinsic record that the patentee in-
    tended the claims to be so limited.” Liebel–
    Flarsheim Co. v. Medrad, Inc., 
    358 F.3d 898
    , 913
    (Fed. Cir. 2004).
    GE Lighting Sols., LLC v. AgiLight, Inc., 
    750 F.3d 1304
    ,
    1309 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (alteration in original). The disposi-
    tive inquiry in this appeal, therefore, is whether and to
    what extent the specification disparages mobile devices
    that include “computer modules.”
    The district court found that one of the most telling
    examples of disclaimer was that the patents-in-suit
    specify that “cellular telephone 100 is not a combination
    of a computer module and a wireless communication
    module as in prior art attempts to create an intelligent
    telephone,” ’037 patent col. 14 ll. 52–55, and that “cellular
    telephone 100 utilizes only a microcontroller found in
    telephone 100 and does not require[] a separate computer
    module as in the prior art,” 
    id. at col.
    15 l. 67–col. 16 l. 2.
    In this embodiment, “[t]he user is utilizing cellular tele-
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.                       9
    phone 100 as if cellular telephone 100 was a computer
    connected to network.” 
    Id. at col.
    14 ll. 47–48 (emphasis
    added). In this embodiment, cellular telephone 100 is not
    a computer connected to a network and is not a combina-
    tion of a mobile device with a computer module.
    This single embodiment clearly describes a mobile de-
    vice that does not employ a computer module and draws a
    distinction between those that do and those that do not.
    Unwired Planet correctly argues, however, that reference
    to one embodiment—even the preferred embodiment—is
    insufficient to justify finding a disavowal. And Unwired
    Planet is correct that in GE Lighting Sols., LLC, 
    750 F.3d 1304
    , we said just that. This one embodiment is not,
    however, the only portion of the specification upon which
    the district court relied to support finding a disavowal of
    claim scope.
    Indeed, the specification of the patents-in-suit is rife
    with remarks that disparage and, therefore, disclaim
    mobile devices that incorporate computer modules. Such
    remarks permeate the specification. Unwired Planet
    concedes as much. Unwired Planet Op. Br. 16 (“[I]t is
    assuredly true that the specification disparaged (repeat-
    edly) devices with ‘computer modules’ . . . .”); 
    id. at 23
    (“It
    is absolutely true that the specification ‘disparaged’ the
    use of computer modules . . . .”); 
    id. at 32
    (“[T]he specifica-
    tion does indeed disparage the prior art . . . .”).
    The Background of the Invention defines the problems
    that accompanied the prior art, which the invention
    purported to solve:
    For at least the last five years, the wireless com-
    munication industry has tried to merge computing
    with wireless communications. . . .
    After years of research and development, and
    hundreds of millions of dollars’ investment by
    some of the largest companies in the field such as
    10                       OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.
    Motorola, AT&T, Sony, Matsushita, Phillips and
    IBM, the results have been nothing but disap-
    pointing. Typically, the intelligent communication
    devices resulting from these efforts include both
    the hardware necessary for a computer module
    and the hardware for a wireless communications
    module. Examples of such products are Simon
    from IBM and Bell South, MagicLink from Sony,
    and Envoy from Motorola.
    Fundamental design and cost problems arising di-
    rectly from the approach taken by the designers of
    these intelligent communication devices have lim-
    ited widespread market acceptance of these devic-
    es. The combination of a wireless communication
    module with a computing module leads to a device
    that is too bulky, too expensive, and too inflexible
    to address the market requirements.
    The combination of the two modules is too large
    and too heavy to fit in a user’s pocket. Pocket size
    is a key requirement of the mobile communication
    market which remains unmet by these devices.
    In addition, the cost of these devices is close to the
    sum of the cost of the computer module and of the
    communications module, which is around a one
    thousand dollar end-user price. Market research
    indicates that the market for intelligent wireless
    communications devices is at prices around $300.
    Even with a 20% compound cost decline, it would
    take five years for the combination units to meet
    today’s customers’ price requirements. It is there-
    fore unlikely that devices designed by combining a
    computer and a wireless module, no matter how
    miniaturized and cost reduced, can satisfy the cost
    requirement of the market during this decade.
    ....
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.                   11
    . . . [T]he current crop of intelligent communica-
    tion devices run only the few applications which
    were burned into their ROMs at the factory or
    which are contained in a ROM card plugged into a
    slot designed for this purpose. This scheme lacks
    the flexibility needed to run the thousands of ap-
    plications required to address the fragmented re-
    quirements of the market and provides no simple
    method for updating the applications after the de-
    vice has been sold.
    ’037 patent col. 1 l. 44–col. 2 l. 40 (emphases added). The
    import of this section of the specification could not be
    clearer: the perceived problem with the prior art “intelli-
    gent devices” was the attempt to combine mobile devices
    with computer modules, resulting in a device that was too
    expensive, too bulky, too inflexible, and, therefore, com-
    mercially infeasible.
    This section similarly makes clear that any solution to
    this problem requires movement away from the prior art’s
    attempt to combine a computer module with a mobile
    device:
    Up to now, intelligent communication devices
    have combined a computing module with a wire-
    less communications module. However, to gain
    widespread acceptance, a two-way data communi-
    cation device with processing capability and the
    ability to run a wide variety of differing user ap-
    plications is needed. In addition, such a device
    should be comparable in size, cost, and weight to a
    cellular telephone.
    
    Id. at col.
    3 ll. 29–35. The Summary of the Invention
    begins by continuing along these lines, distinguishing the
    invention of the patents-in-suit from the prior art devices
    that include computer modules:
    12                     OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.
    According to the principles of this invention, the
    prior art limitations of combining a computer
    module with a wireless communication module
    have been overcome. In particular, a two-way data
    communication device of this invention, such as a
    cellular telephone, two-way pager, or telephone
    includes a client module that communicates with
    a server computer over a two-way data communi-
    cation network.
    
    Id. at col.
    3 ll. 38–44 (emphasis added). The summary
    continues, indicating that “the two-way data communica-
    tion device of this invention utilizes a client module to
    transmit a message including a resource locator selected
    by the user over the two-way data communication net-
    work to a server on a server computer on the computer
    network.” 
    Id. at col.
    4 ll. 40–44 (emphasis added). In this
    way, the patents-in-suit specify that the solution to the
    problems with the prior art is to employ a “client module”
    executed on a “microcontroller”—rather than a “computer
    module.”
    The lightweight “client module” and “microcontroller”
    solve these problems, moreover, precisely because they
    differ from the bulky, prior art “intelligent devices.” “The
    client module of this invention is lightweight, and thus
    requires only lightweight resources in a two-way data
    communication device.” 
    Id. at col.
    6 ll. 34–36 (emphasis
    added); see also 
    id. at col.
    9 ll. 16–24 (“The client module
    is small, e.g., under 64 KByte, and requires only low
    processing power congruent with the memory chips and
    built-in microcontrollers in two-way data communication
    devices such as cellular telephone 100, two-way pager
    101, and telephone 102. Thus, unlike the prior art at-
    tempts at an intelligent telephone, the cost, size, and
    battery life of either cellular telephones, two-way pagers,
    or telephones that incorporate this invention are not
    adversely affected.” (emphases added)).
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.                      13
    In the Detailed Description section of the specifica-
    tion, the patents-in-suit disclose that prior art computer
    networks already were dividing computing power between
    a client and a remote server. The patents-in-suit extend
    this same concept to mobile devices: “[w]hile client/server
    architectures have been used extensively in computer
    networks, a client/sever [sic] architecture implements [sic]
    using two-way communication data devices such as cellu-
    lar telephone 100, two-way pager 101, or telephone 102
    yields new and unexpected results.” 
    Id. at col.
    9 ll. 25–29.
    Because client/server architectures in computer net-
    works were in the prior art, Unwired Planet’s argument
    must be that, by employing a microprocessor it invented
    the combination of the prior art “computer module” with a
    mobile device. Yet that combination constitutes the very
    embodiment that gives rise to the problems the invention
    purports to solve (namely, the bulk, cost, inflexibility, and
    short battery life of intelligent devices).
    It is the lightweight nature of the patents’ “client
    module,” run on the “microcontroller,” that gives rise to
    the benefits of the claimed invention, avoiding the prob-
    lems identified with the prior art “intelligent devices”:
    Despite the robustness of the client module in in-
    terpreting a wide variety of application [sic], typi-
    cally, the client process is lightweight and thus
    requires only lightweight resources, e.g., 60
    Kbytes of read-only memory (ROM) for the client
    module, 10 Kbytes of random access memory
    (RAM), and less than one million instructions per
    second (MIPS) of processing power. Since the cli-
    ent process needs only these lightweight resources
    in a two-way data communication device, the cli-
    ent can use existing resources in such a device
    and therefore does not add to the cost of the two-
    way data communication device such as data ca-
    pable cellular telephone 100.
    14                      OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.    v. APPLE INC.
    
    Id. at col.
    16 ll. 24–36 (emphases added). The specifica-
    tion continues: “Again, note that this invention does not
    require a separate processor and instead can utilize the
    processing power that already exists in cellular telephone
    600, because as described above, the client process of this
    invention is so lightweight.” 
    Id. at col.
    20 ll. 56–60 (em-
    phasis added). The specification repeatedly and clearly
    distinguishes the invention of the patents-in-suit from
    more powerful—and therefore more costly—mobile devic-
    es in combination with “computer modules.” Such mobile
    devices being more powerful and more costly, the patents-
    in-suit repeatedly disparage them for their failure to meet
    the demands of the market. 4
    There is no doubt a high bar to finding disavowal of
    claim scope through disparagement of the prior art in the
    specification. In this case, however, it is difficult to envis-
    age how, in light of the repeated disparagement of mobile
    devices with “computer modules” discussed above, one
    could read the claims of the patents-in-suit to cover such
    devices. We agree with the district court that they do not.
    We affirm the district court’s claim construction that
    a “mobile device” is “a portable wireless two-way commu-
    4  Unwired Planet argues that the repeated dispar-
    agement of mobile devices with “computer modules” in the
    specification is meant only to denigrate those devices as
    “commercially infeasible, not technically infeasible.”
    Unwired Planet Op. Br. 32. But we see no reason to
    conclude that a specification’s repeated recitation of
    marketing deficiencies cannot give rise to a finding of
    claim scope disavowal. The fact that a combination
    product—one with both a microprocessor and a computer
    module—might work does not mean that the invention
    claimed encompassed such a product, particularly where
    that product would retain all the deficiencies of the prior
    art.
    OPENWAVE SYSTEMS, INC.   v. APPLE INC.               15
    nication device that does not contain a computer module”
    and that “this construction does not read out embodi-
    ments including microcontrollers.” Openwave, 
    2014 WL 651911
    , at *3 & n.3. On this ground, we affirm the judg-
    ment of non-infringement premised on that construction.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, and because we find that
    Unwired Planet’s remaining arguments are without
    merit, we conclude that the district court properly con-
    strued the claim terms at issue and properly entered
    judgment of non-infringement. Accordingly, the district
    court’s judgment is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED