Every Penny Counts, Inc. v. American Express, Co. , 563 F.3d 1378 ( 2009 )


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  • United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    2008-1434
    EVERY PENNY COUNTS, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    VISA U.S.A., INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    GREEN DOT CORPORATION,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    MASTERCARD INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    -------------------------------------------
    2008-1438
    EVERY PENNY COUNTS, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    FIRST DATA CORPORATION,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    VALUTEC CARD SOLUTIONS, LLC,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    INCOMM HOLDINGS, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    COMDATA STORED VALUE SOLUTIONS, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Harvey S. Kauget, Phelps Dunbar LLP, of Tampa, Florida, argued for plaintiff-
    appellant in appeals 2008-1434 and 2008-1438. With him on the briefs was Eric R.
    Pellenbarg.
    Peter J. Armenio, Kirkland & Ellis, LLP, of New York, New York, argued for all
    defendants-appellees in appeal 2008-1434. With him on the brief for American Express
    Company was John C. Spaccarotella. Of counsel were James E. Marina and Ryan
    Coletti. On the brief for Visa U.S.A., Inc., were Roderick M. Thompson, Helen Dutton,
    and Eugene Y. Mar, Farella Braun & Martel LLP, of San Francisco, California. On the
    brief for Green Dot Corporation were J. Bennett Clark and Ameer Gado, Bryan Cave
    LLP, of St. Louis, Missouri. On the brief for Mastercard International Incorporated were
    Robert C. Scheinfeld and Eliot D. Williams, Baker Botts L.L.P., of New York, New York.
    Alan M. Fisch, Kaye Scholer LLP, of Washington, DC, argued for defendants-
    appellees First Data Corporation, Valutec Card Solutions, LLC, InComm Holdings, Inc.,
    and Comdata Stored Value Solutions, Inc. With him on the brief for Comdata Stored
    Value Solutions, Inc., were Jason F. Hoffman, Coke Morgan Stewart, R. William Sigler,
    and Kevin W. Jakel. On the brief for InComm Holdings, Inc., were Michael S. Connor,
    Benjamin F. Sidbury, and Theresa Conduah, Alston & Bird LLP, of Charlotte, North
    Carolina. On the brief for Valutec Card Solutions, LLC, were Scott J. Bornstein and
    Allan A. Kassenoff, Greenberg Traurig, LLP, of New York, New York.
    Mark M. Supko, Crowell & Moring LLP, of Washington, DC, for defendant-
    appellee First Data Corporation. With him on the brief was Michael I. Coe.
    Appealed from: United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida
    Judge Richard A. Lazzara
    United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    2008-1434
    EVERY PENNY COUNTS, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    AMERICAN EXPRESS COMPANY,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    VISA U.S.A., INC,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    GREEN DOT CORPORATION,
    Defendant-Appellee
    and
    MASTERCARD INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ----------------------------------------
    2008-1438
    EVERY PENNY COUNTS, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    FIRST DATA CORPORATION,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    VALUETEC CARD SOLUTIONS, LLC,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    INCOMM HOLDINGS, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    COMDATA STORED VALUE SOLUTIONS, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida
    in case nos. 8:07-CV-1254 and 8:07-CV-1255, Judge Richard A. Lazzara.
    __________________________
    DECIDED: April 30, 2009
    __________________________
    Before MICHEL, Chief Judge, BRYSON, Circuit Judge, and CUDAHY, Senior Circuit
    Judge. *
    CUDAHY, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiff-Appellant Every Penny Counts, Inc. (EPC) appeals two final judgments
    by the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida. The first judgment
    *
    Honorable Richard D. Cudahy, Senior Circuit Judge, United States Court
    of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, sitting by designation.
    2008-1434, -1438                            2
    rejected EPC’s patent infringement claims against defendants American Express Co.,
    Visa U.S.A., Inc., Green Dot Corp and Mastercard International, Inc. (the Open Gift
    Card Defendants). The second judgment rejected EPC’s infringement claim against
    defendants First Data Corp., Valutec Card Solutions, LLC, Incomm Holdings, Inc. and
    Comdata Stored Value Solutions, Inc. (the Closed Gift Card Defendants).             EPC
    stipulated to the entry of both judgments following a Markman hearing, at the conclusion
    of which the district court adopted the Open Gift Card Defendants’ proposed
    construction of certain terms in EPC’s patent claims. We affirm.
    I.
    EPC is a patent holding company that has patented a method for donating
    “excess cash” to charities and savings accounts. Its founder Dr. Bertram Burke is a
    retired psychoanalyst who relates his “invention” back to an experience he had buying
    ice cream: after he paid for an ice cream cone, he was given 52 cents in change and he
    thought that this small amount of change was practically worthless. He considered
    putting the change in a canister on the counter ostensibly intended to raise money for a
    charitable cause, but he did not trust that the money in the canister would actually be
    devoted to charity. He describes his invention as a way of solving this “problem of loose
    change.” At issue in this case are five patents, which describe an “automatic donation
    system” for contributing “excess cash”—or some equivalent term––from retail sales
    transactions into “predetermined” charitable or savings accounts.
    In 2007, EPC brought two separate patent infringement suits against two sets of
    defendants, each of whom makes and sells gift cards that can be used instead of cash
    to complete retail transactions. The Open Gift Card Defendants sell gift cards that can
    2008-1434, -1438                           3
    be used in multiple retail locations; the Closed Gift Card Defendants sell gift cards that
    must be used with one specified vendor. EPC alleges that both types of gift cards
    infringe its patents because both involve a means of “loading value onto accounts at a
    point-of-sale terminal.”
    The district court held a joint claim construction hearing, at which the parties
    agreed that the court’s construction of the term “excess cash” was potentially
    dispositive. The Open Gift Card Defendants proposed to construe “excess cash” as an
    “amount selected by the payor beyond the total amount due at the point of sale.” (In
    other words, “excess cash,” under the Open Gift Card Defendants’ construction, is the
    “loose change,” the problem of which EPC’s “invention,” such as it is, was meant to
    solve.)
    On its face, EPC’s proposed construction was not so different from that of the
    Open Gift Card Defendants. EPC proposed to construe “excess cash” as “an amount
    . . . offered in excess of the sale price of merchandise” (emphasis added). However,
    during the hearing, it became clear that EPC was relying on a non-traditional
    understanding of the meaning of “sale price.” Under EPC’s proposed interpretation of
    “sale price”—which is to say, its interpretation of its proposed interpretation of the claim
    term—an item’s “sale price” is the portion of a transaction that a merchant would
    account for as a sale. According to EPC, the “sale price” of a $50 gift card may be as
    low as $0, because the merchant does not typically account for transactions involving
    gift cards as “sales” until the gift card is redeemed. During the hearing, EPC offered no
    evidence in support of its proposed interpretation of “sale price,” or of accounting
    2008-1434, -1438                              4
    practice with respect to gift card transactions. Instead, EPC’s attorney simply asserted
    that this is how merchants understand the phrase “sale price.”
    At the conclusion of the Markman hearing, the district court adopted the Open
    Gift Card Defendants’ proposed construction of “excess cash.” EPC admitted that it
    could not prove infringement against either set of defendants under this construction,
    stipulated to the entry of final judgment in both cases and brought separate appeals.
    EPC concedes that the two appeals raise the same issues.
    II.
    We review de novo the district court’s construction of the disputed claims.
    Storage Tech. Corp. v. Cisco Sys., Inc., 
    329 F.3d 823
    , 830 (Fed. Cir. 2003). The
    purpose of claim construction is to determine the meaning and scope of the patent
    claims that the plaintiff alleges have been infringed.    O2 Micro Int’l Ltd. v. Beyond
    Innovation Tech. Co., 
    521 F.3d 1351
    , 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2008). “The construction that
    stays true to the claim language and most naturally aligns with the patent’s description
    of the invention will be, in the end, the correct construction.” Phillips v. AWH Corp.,
    
    415 F.3d 1303
    , 1316 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc) (quoting Renishaw PLC v. Marposs
    Societa’ per Azioni, 
    158 F.3d 1243
    , 1250 (Fed. Cir. 1998)).
    At the center of this dispute is the meaning of the phrase “excess cash payment.”
    EPC’s patents describe a method for “apportioning . . . a part of [an] excess cash
    payment among a number of predetermined accounts” (emphasis added). 1 Again, we
    “focus[] at the outset on how the patentee used the claim term in the claims,
    1
    The patents-in-suit are related. For simplicity we refer to the disclosure of
    
    U.S. Patent No. 5,621,640
    . The other patents-in-suit are U.S. Patent Nos. 6,088,682;
    6,876,976; and 7,171,370.
    2008-1434, -1438                            5
    specification, and prosecution history, rather than starting with a broad definition and
    whittling it down.”     Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1321. Of particular relevance is the patent
    specification, which we have described as “the primary basis for construing the claims.”
    Standard Oil Co. v. Am. Cyanamid Co., 
    774 F.2d 448
    , 452 (Fed. Cir. 1985); see also
    Metabolite Labs., Inc. v. Lab. Corp. of Am. Holdings, 
    370 F.3d 1354
    , 1360 (Fed. Cir.
    2004) (“In most cases, the best source for discerning the proper context of claim terms
    is the patent specification . . . .”).
    In the present case, the patent specification strongly supports the construction of
    “excess cash” that the district court ultimately adopted. The specification describes the
    patent as a method “for conveniently and frequently donating to qualified charities and
    savings or other accounts.” This method, in turn, is further described as follows:
    In current shopping situations a clerk inputs the price of all items in
    a cash register and the latter totals the price. The consumer offers either
    the exact amount of cash or a sum exceeding the price, and the clerk
    enters that amount. The cash register then subtracts the price from the
    cash.
    The excess cash offers the customers an opportunity to save small
    amounts of money painlessly. It also affords the consumer to donate [sic]
    small amounts of money to charity.
    The portion of the specification quoted above tells us what “excess cash” means in the
    context of the patent claim: “excess cash” is what is left over after the merchant
    subtracts the price of the items the consumer wishes to buy from the cash the consumer
    tenders to complete the sale. Where the consumer does not offer a sum in excess of
    the total displayed on the cash register, then there is no excess cash.          All this is
    captured quite well by the construction of “excess cash” that the district court ultimately
    adopted, according to which “excess cash” refers to “an amount selected by the payor
    beyond the total amount owed at the point of sale.”
    2008-1434, -1438                             6
    EPC has surprisingly little to say about what it alleges is substantively wrong with
    the district court’s construction, or why its proposed construction would be better on the
    merits.   Instead, it attempts to assign error to the district court’s construction on a
    number of procedural grounds.           Principally, it argues that the court erred by
    (1) spending a portion of the claim construction hearing considering the meaning of the
    phrase “sales price,” which was not a disputed claim term; and (2) using the accused
    products to tailor a construction of the patent claims that would make it impossible for
    EPC to prove infringement. Neither of these arguments has merit.
    EPC’s first argument is that the district court erred by spending a portion of the
    claim construction hearing considering the meaning of the phrase “sales price,” which
    was not a disputed claim term. This argument is somewhat puzzling, since it was
    EPC’s own proposed construction that raised questions concerning the meaning of
    “sales price.” EPC proposed to construe “excess cash” as “an amount . . . offered in
    excess of the sale price of merchandise” (emphasis added). It admitted, however, that
    the parties disagree about what constitutes a “sale.” According to the defendants, a
    sale occurs when cash changes hands at the cash register. According to EPC, by
    contrast, to call a transaction a sale is to imply that the merchant would treat the cash
    the consumer tenders as income on its accounting statements. EPC also insists—
    without offering any evidence—that when a consumer purchases a gift card, a merchant
    would not consider this to be a sale.
    In the light of this acknowledged disagreement over the meaning of “sales price,”
    the fact that EPC would both propose to define its patent claims in terms of this phrase
    and then fault the court for attempting to clarify the phrase’s meaning is at best ironic
    2008-1434, -1438                             7
    and at worst disingenuous. Again, the court’s obligation is to ensure that questions of
    the scope of the patent claims are not left to the jury. O2 Micro, 
    521 F.3d at 1361-62
    .
    In order to fulfill this obligation, the court must see to it that disputes concerning the
    scope of the patent claims are fully resolved. 
    Id.
     In the present case, to evaluate EPC’s
    proposal concerning the scope of its claims, the court first had to understand this
    proposal. If the court had adopted EPC’s proposed construction without first assigning
    a fixed meaning to this construction, then it would quite clearly have failed to assign “a
    fixed, unambiguous, legally operative meaning to the claim.” Liquid Dynamics Corp. v.
    Vaughn Co., 
    355 F.3d 1361
    , 1367 (Fed. Cir. 2004). Thus, there was nothing improper
    about the fact that the court interpreted EPC’s (quite slippery) proposed construction.
    As Michele de Montaigne has said, there are times when “[w]e need to interpret
    interpretations more than to interpret things.” Jacques Derrida, Structure, Sign and Play
    in the Discourse of the Human Sciences, in Writing and Difference 278 (Alan Bass,
    trans. 1980) (quoting Montaigne).
    Equally without merit is EPC’s argument that the district court erred by “tailoring
    its claim construction to fit the dimensions of the accused product.” A court may not use
    the accused products for the sole purpose of arriving at a construction of the claim
    terms that would make it impossible for the plaintiff to prove infringement. See Wilson
    Sporting Goods Co. v. Hillerich & Bradsby Co., 
    442 F.3d 1322
    , 1331 (Fed. Cir. 2006).
    But that is not what the court did here. To the contrary, the court quite properly invited
    the parties’ views of what they thought “excess cash” meant in the context of a series of
    hypothetical transactions, some of which involved the accused products. For example,
    the court described a situation in which a consumer tenders $50 for a grocery store gift
    2008-1434, -1438                            8
    card with a face value of $50, and then asked the parties to identify whether there was
    any “excess cash” in that transaction, and if so, what portion of the amount tendered
    constitutes the “excess.” In other words, the court considered the accused products
    only to elicit the parties’ views about what the claim term means in the context of a
    concrete transaction involving these products. EPC’s suggestion that this was improper
    is way wide of the mark. See 
    id. at 1326-27
     (“While a trial court should certainly not
    prejudge the ultimate infringement analysis by construing claims with an aim to include
    or exclude an accused product or process, knowledge of that product or process
    provides meaningful context for the first step of the infringement analysis, claim
    construction.”); Aero Prods. Int’l, Inc. v. Intex Recreation Corp., 
    466 F.3d 1000
    , 1012 n.6
    (Fed. Cir. 2006) (“Although the court revealed an awareness of the accused device, the
    court’s awareness of the accused device is permissible.”).
    In short, the district court correctly construed the claim terms in EPC’s patents.
    EPC’s attempts to assign error to the process by which the court arrived at its
    construction cannot succeed.
    III.
    The district court appropriately construed the key term in EPC’s patent claims.
    We therefore affirm. The defendants may recover their costs accrued in this court.
    AFFIRMED.
    2008-1434, -1438                             9