Hunting Titan, Inc. v. Dynaenergetics Europe Gmbh ( 2022 )


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  • Case: 20-2163   Document: 59    Page: 1   Filed: 03/24/2022
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.,
    Appellant
    v.
    DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH,
    Cross-Appellant
    ANDREW HIRSHFELD, PERFORMING THE
    FUNCTIONS AND DUTIES OF THE UNDER
    SECRETARY OF COMMERCE FOR
    INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND DIRECTOR OF
    THE UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK
    OFFICE,
    Intervenor
    ______________________
    2020-2163, 2020-2191
    ______________________
    Appeals from the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2018-
    00600.
    ______________________
    Decided: March 24, 2022
    ______________________
    JASON SAUNDERS, Arnold & Saunders, LLP, Houston,
    TX, argued for appellant. Also represented by GORDON
    ARNOLD, CHRISTOPHER MCKEON.
    Case: 20-2163     Document: 59      Page: 2   Filed: 03/24/2022
    2       HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    BARRY J. HERMAN, Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP,
    Baltimore, MD, argued for cross-appellant. Also repre-
    sented by WILLIAM R. HUBBARD; CHRISTINE H. DUPRIEST,
    PRESTON HAMILTON HEARD, Atlanta, GA; LISA MOYLES,
    JASON ROCKMAN, Moyles IP, LLC, Shelton, CT.
    SARAH E. CRAVEN, Office of the Solicitor, United States
    Patent and Trademark Office, Alexandria, VA, argued for
    intervenor. Also represented by THOMAS W. KRAUSE,
    ROBERT J. MCMANUS, MAUREEN DONOVAN QUELER,
    FARHEENA YASMEEN RASHEED.
    ______________________
    Before PROST, REYNA, and HUGHES, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge HUGHES.
    Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge PROST.
    HUGHES, Circuit Judge.
    Hunting Titan, Inc. petitioned for inter partes review
    of claims 1–15 of 
    U.S. Patent No. 9,581,422,
     asserting 16
    grounds of unpatentability based on theories of anticipa-
    tion and obviousness, including allegations that the claims
    were anticipated by Schacherer, 
    U.S. Patent No. 9,689,223
    .
    The Board instituted trial on all grounds and ultimately
    agreed with Hunting Titan, finding all of the original
    claims unpatentable.
    After the petition was instituted, DynaEnergetics Eu-
    rope GmbH, the patent owner, moved to amend the ’422 pa-
    tent to add proposed substitute claims 16–22. Hunting
    Titan opposed the motion to amend, advancing only obvi-
    ousness grounds. Although Hunting Titan did not assert
    that Schacherer anticipated the proposed substitute
    claims, the Board determined that the original and pro-
    posed substitute claims alike were unpatentable as antici-
    pated by Schacherer. DynaEnergetics requested rehearing
    and Precedential Opinion Panel review of the Board’s
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    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH         3
    denial of the motion to amend. The Panel granted
    DynaEnergetics’s request for rehearing, vacated the
    Board’s decision denying DynaEnergetics’s motion to
    amend, and then—after concluding that Hunting Titan
    had not proven by a preponderance of the evidence that
    proposed substitute claims 16–22 are unpatentable—
    granted the motion to amend the ’422 patent to add the
    proposed substitute claims.
    Hunting Titan appeals the Precedential Opinion
    Panel’s vacatur of the Board’s decision denying the motion
    to amend, and DynaEnergetics cross-appeals the Board’s
    decision finding the original claims of the ’422 patent an-
    ticipated by Schacherer. We affirm on both grounds.
    I
    DynaEnergetics owns the ’422 patent, which is di-
    rected to a perforating gun used in an oil wellbore to pene-
    trate the well lining and surrounding rock formation in
    order to provide a flow path for oil into the wellbore from
    the surrounding rock formation. ’422 patent, 1:15–44. The
    perforating gun’s key feature is a “wireless” and “selective”
    detonator assembly for detonating an explosive projectile
    charge within the perforating gun “without the need to at-
    tach wires to the detonator.” 
    Id.
     2:24–34. Claim 1 is repre-
    sentative and is reproduced below.
    1. A wireless detonator assembly configured for be-
    ing electrically contactably received within a perfo-
    rating gun assembly without using a wired
    electrical connection, comprising:
    a shell configured for housing components
    of the detonator assembly;
    more than one electrical contact compo-
    nent, wherein at least one of the electrical
    contact components extends from the shell
    and further wherein the electrical contact
    component comprises an electrically
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    4      HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    contactable line-in portion, an electrically
    contactable line-out portion and an electri-
    cally contactable ground portion, the
    ground portion in combination with the
    line-in portion and the line-out portion be-
    ing configured to replace the wired electri-
    cal connection to complete an electrical
    connection merely by contact;
    an insulator positioned between the line-in
    portion and the line-out portion, wherein
    the insulator electrically isolates the line-
    in portion from the line-out portion; and
    means for selective detonation housed
    within the shell, wherein the detonator as-
    sembly is configured for electrically con-
    tactably forming the electrical connection
    merely by the contact.
    
    Id.
     8:39–61.
    A
    Hunting Titan petitioned for inter partes review of
    claims 1–15 of the ’422 patent, asserting 16 grounds of un-
    patentability based on theories of anticipation and obvious-
    ness. The Board instituted on the petition. Appx246.
    DynaEnergetics opposed the petition. It also filed a contin-
    gent motion to amend the ’422 patent to add new claims
    16–22, in the event the Board were to find original claims
    5–11 unpatentable.
    1
    Relevant to this appeal is Hunting Titan’s first as-
    serted ground of unpatentability that Schacherer, U.S. Pa-
    tent No. 9,689,223, anticipates all of the ’422 patent’s
    original claims. DynaEnergetics maintained, in its Patent
    Owner Response, that Schacherer lacks several limitations
    of the claimed detonator assembly.
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    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH           5
    DynaEnergetics asserted that Schacherer does not
    teach or disclose the claimed “wireless detonator assem-
    bly.” Appx320 (emphasis added). According to DynaEner-
    getics, Schacherer “incorporate[s] an electrically wired
    detonator (38) into a tandem sub or connector,” 
    id.,
     while
    the claimed detonator assembly “replace[s] [the] electri-
    cally wired detonator . . . with a wireless detonator 10 and
    house[s] the components of the detonator, including the
    means for selective detonation, within a shell (12).”
    Appx321. DynaEnergetics also argued that “Schacherer
    does not teach or suggest incorporating the selecting firing
    module (32) into the wired detonator (38),” but instead “de-
    scribes a [tandem] sub for housing such components.”
    Appx322–23. Thus, according to DynaEnergetics,
    “Schacherer does not teach or suggest a shell configured for
    housing components of the detonator assembly.” Appx323.
    Because these limitations, among others not relevant
    to this appeal, are allegedly not taught by Schacherer,
    DynaEnergetics argued that Hunting Titan failed to
    “show[] that Schacherer anticipates [any] of the challenged
    claims of the ’422 [p]atent.” Appx333. The Board disagreed
    with DynaEnergetics, concluding that each original claim
    is unpatentable as anticipated by Schacherer. Appx24.
    Significant to this appeal, the Board first considered
    claim 1’s uncontested limitations and found these limita-
    tions fully supported by the record and “effectively admit-
    ted” by DynaEnergetics. Appx9. The Board accordingly
    concluded that Hunting Titan had met its burden of prov-
    ing that Schacherer discloses a “detonator assembly” that
    is:
    (1) “received with a perforating gun,”
    (2) has “more than one electrical contact compo-
    nent, wherein at least one of the electrical contact
    components . . . comprises an electrically contacta-
    ble line-in portion, . . . line-out portion[,] and . . .
    ground portion,” and
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    6      HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    (3) has “means for selective detonation,” as recited
    in representative claim 1.
    Appx9–10. The Board then addressed whether Schacherer
    teaches or suggests the remaining limitations that are pur-
    portedly missing from the prior art reference.
    Beginning with claim 1’s “wireless detonator assem-
    bly” limitation, the Board said that “DynaEnergetics [had]
    oversimplifie[d] what constitutes Schacherer’s detonator
    assembly and ignore[d] the express language of the [repre-
    sentative] claim” in the ’422 patent. Appx13. The Board ex-
    plained that, “consistent with the claim language and
    specification, the ‘wireless’ and ‘merely by the contact’ lim-
    itations speak expressly to how one assembly forms an elec-
    trical connection with the other assembly—through bodily
    contact as opposed to connection of physical wires.” 
    Id.
     But
    “nowhere does the ’422 patent preclude the use of wired
    connections internal to the detonator assembly.” 
    Id.
    Still, the Board observed, DynaEnergetics attempted to
    fall back on a third, related limitation—i.e., “without using
    a wired connection”—when it “distort[ed] the [clarifying]
    testimony of Hunting Titan’s expert,” Appx15, and
    “fault[ed] Schacherer for using a wired connection between
    subcomponents of the detonator assembly,” Appx13–14.
    “What DynaEnergetics fail[ed] to acknowledge,” however,
    was “that the claimed ‘wireless,’ ‘without using a wired con-
    nection,’ and ‘merely by the contact’ limitations pertain
    solely to how the detonator assembly as a whole forms an
    electrical connection with the perforating gun assembly as
    a whole, irrespective of how any subcomponents with each
    assembly are connected.” Appx15. And because “the claims
    require only the absence of a wired connection between the
    detonator assembly and the perforating gun assembly,” the
    Board “conclude[d] that Schacherer is a ‘wireless’ detona-
    tor assembly in the manner recited by claim 1” since its
    “detonator assembly achieves an electrical connection with
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    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH       7
    the perforating gun assembly merely by contact of one with
    the other.” Appx16.
    The Board also determined that Schacherer discloses
    claim 1’s “shell configured for housing components of the
    detonator assembly.” In reaching this determination, the
    Board construed “shell” to mean “a shell, housing, or casing
    for housing any component of the detonator assembly, in-
    cluding but not limited to a detonator head plug, a fuse
    head, an electronic circuit board, or explosive components.”
    Appx17. It then found that this construction “matches ex-
    actly the structure and function” of Schacherer’s con-
    nector 30. Appx19. The Board thus dismissed
    DynaEnergetics’s arguments “as nothing more than se-
    mantics.” 
    Id.
    Having determined “that a skilled artisan would have
    understood Schacherer as disclosing each and every limi-
    tation of claim 1,” the Board then determined the same
    with respect to each limitation of independent claims 5
    and 12 as well as the claims depending therefrom.
    Appx24–25.
    2
    Contingent on the Board finding original claims 5–11
    unpatentable, DynaEnergetics also moved the Board to
    amend the ’422 patent to add proposed substitute
    claims 16–22. The substitute claims would retain all the
    limitations of the original claims and further add the fol-
    lowing new limitations:
    1) “a perforating gun housing” having “a detonator
    assembly contained entirely within the perforating
    gun housing,”
    2) “a carrying device positioned within the perfo-
    rating gun housing to hold at least one shaped
    charge,” and
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    8      HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    3) “a detonator assembly contained entirely within
    the perforating gun housing.”
    Appx419, 429. DynaEnergetics asserted that these “contin-
    gent amendments further clarify that the detonator assem-
    bly includes a means for selective detonation within the
    shell, in addition to at least one electrically contactable
    component extending from the shell, all designed in a way
    that replaces wires and instead completes an electrical con-
    nection within the perforating gun housing merely by con-
    tact.” Appx419; see also Appx429. These proposed
    substitute claims are therefore patentable and not antici-
    pated by Schacherer, according to DynaEnergetics, be-
    cause Schacherer’s detonator assembly is not wireless and
    its “selective detonator assembly . . . is clearly not con-
    tained within its perforating gun housing.” Appx430–31.
    So DynaEnergetics argued that Schacherer “does not teach
    or disclose a ‘wirelessly connectable selective detonator as-
    sembly’ that is ‘contained entirely within the perforating
    gun housing without using a wired electrical connection’ as
    recited in” its proposed substitute claims. Appx431.
    Hunting Titan opposed the motion to amend, asserting
    that the proposed substitute claims “d[id] not overcome the
    previously cited prior art in the Petition.” Appx524. Hunt-
    ing Titan identified two publications—
    U.S. Patent No. 10,077,641
     (Rogman) and U.S. Patent Application
    No. 14/888,882 (Harrigan)—that, it contended, “disclose all
    of the additional claim limitations in proposed amended
    claims 16–22 and would have been obvious to combine with
    the previously cited prior art.” Appx524. It also identified
    as pertinent several previously cited prior art references—
    including Schacherer—and asserted that each of these ref-
    erences discloses or teaches every claim limitation of the
    proposed substitute claims. Appx524–44. Based on these
    assertions, Hunting Titan maintained that the proposed
    substitute claims are obvious and therefore unpatentable.
    Hunting Titan “presented only obviousness arguments,
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    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH         9
    without alleging that the proposed substitute claims were
    anticipated by the prior art of record.” Appx33.
    “In [the Board’s] view, none of [DynaEnergetics’s] ad-
    ditional limitations render[ed] the proposed substitute
    claims novel or non-obvious over the prior art of record. In-
    stead,” the Board held, “each of [the additional] limitations
    is taught by the prior art, either as admitted in the ’422 pa-
    tent itself or as disclosed by Schacherer.” Appx26. The
    Board thus decided that “Hunting Titan ha[d] carried its
    burden in showing that DynaEnergetics’[s] proposed
    amendments d[id] not overcome the anticipatory nature of
    Schacherer’s disclosure,” and it denied DynaEnergetics’s
    motion to amend. Appx29. In reaching this decision, the
    Board “addresse[d] only Hunting Titan’s anticipation chal-
    lenge based on Schacherer . . . . [It] render[ed] no findings
    or conclusions as to Hunting Titan’s numerous obviousness
    challenges.” 1 Appx34.
    B
    DynaEnergetics requested rehearing and Precedential
    Opinion Panel review of the Board’s denial of the motion to
    amend. The Panel granted DynaEnergetics’s request for re-
    view to address “[u]nder what circumstances and at what
    time during an inter partes review . . . the Board [may]
    raise a ground of unpatentability that a petitioner did not
    advance or insufficiently developed against substitute pro-
    posed claims in a motion to amend[.]” Appx34.
    The Panel acknowledged that our decision in Nike, Inc.
    v. Adidas AG, 
    955 F.3d 45
     (Fed. Cir. 2020), had “resolve[d]
    1   In a footnote and without further explanation, the
    Board found “persuasive” Hunting Titan’s argument that a
    particular modification to Schacherer would have been ob-
    vious as “within the purview of Schacherer and the general
    knowledge of a skilled artisan.” Appx29 n.5; see also
    Appx34 n.2.
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    10     HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    the question of whether the Board may advance a ground
    of unpatentability that a petitioner does not advance, or in-
    sufficiently develop[s], against substitute claims proposed
    in a motion to amend,” and it agreed that Nike had an-
    swered this question in the affirmative. Appx39. But the
    Panel said, Nike “d[id] not address the circumstances in
    which the Board should advance such a ground of un-
    patentability in relation to substitute claims proposed in a
    motion to amend.” Appx40. And the Panel “conclude[d] that
    only under rare circumstances should the need arise for the
    Board to advance grounds of unpatentability to address
    proposed substitute claims that the petitioner did not ad-
    vance, or insufficiently developed, in its opposition to the
    motion.” Appx40.
    The Panel believed that “the better approach, in most
    instances, is to rely on the incentives the adversarial sys-
    tem creates, and expect that the petitioner will usually
    have an incentive to set forth the reasons why the proposed
    substitute claims are unpatentable.” Appx43. Still, the
    Panel left open the possibility for the Board to sua sponte
    raise a ground of unpatentability, but “only . . . under rare
    circumstances,” such as when a petitioner “cease[s] to par-
    ticipate in the proceeding altogether” or “chooses not to op-
    pose the motion to amend.” Appx43–44. The Panel further
    accepted that “there may be circumstances where certain
    evidence of unpatentability has not been raised by the pe-
    titioner, but is readily identifiable and persuasive such
    that the Board should take it up in the interest of support-
    ing the integrity of the patent system, notwithstanding the
    adversarial nature of the proceedings.” Appx44. Although
    the Panel chose not “to delineate [every situation] with par-
    ticularity,” it did put forth one exemplary situation: “where
    the record readily and persuasively establishes that substi-
    tute claims are unpatentable for the same reasons that cor-
    responding original claims are unpatentable.” Appx44. In
    addition, it noted that “[s]uch situations are usually fact-
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    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH      11
    specific” and gave the Board discretion to “address them as
    they arise.” Appx44.
    The Panel then observed that Hunting Titan had
    “never mentioned anticipation as a ground” of unpatenta-
    bility against the proposed substitute claims. Appx48. It
    further rejected Hunting Titan’s assertion that its antici-
    pation arguments against the original claims, found in its
    petition, were “sufficient to also raise arguments regarding
    anticipation of the proposed substitute claims by
    Schacherer.” Appx48. And because “raising a ground of un-
    patentability in a petition against original claims in a pa-
    tent does not provide a patent owner with sufficient notice
    that new arguments would be asserted using that same ref-
    erence against new substitute claims proposed in a motion
    to amend,” the Panel concluded that “the anticipation
    ground based on Schacherer . . . was not advanced, much
    less sufficiently developed, by [Hunting Titan] against pro-
    posed substitute claims 16–22.” Appx49.
    Although anticipation based on Schacherer was not
    raised by Hunting Titan, the Panel asked “whether the
    Board should [still] have raised that ground against the
    proposed substitute claims in the Final Written Decision.”
    Appx49–50. It decided that the circumstances of this case
    did not “qualify as one of the rare circumstances necessi-
    tating the Board to advance a ground of unpatentability
    that Petitioner did not advance or sufficiently develop.”
    Appx50. In doing so, the Panel faulted Hunting Titan for
    its strategic choice “to oppose the motion to amend on dif-
    ferent grounds,” holding that “an unsuccessful strategy
    alone does not reflect a failure of the adversarial process
    here that might otherwise support the Board’s decision to
    exercise its discretion to sua sponte raise a new ground of
    unpatentability.” Appx50–51.
    The Panel further rejected Hunting Titan’s and sup-
    porting amici’s arguments that “the public interest w[ould]
    be harmed by the issuance of substitute claims that the
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    12     HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    []PTO knows to be unpatentable” “if the Board cannot raise
    the Schacherer anticipation ground” here. Appx51. “The
    public interest is preserved,” the Panel claimed, “by a well-
    functioning adversarial system, which, in contrast to reex-
    amination, is the basic set-up Congress envisioned for inter
    partes reviews.” 
    Id.
     So in a case like this one, where Hunt-
    ing Titan “vigorously prosecuted its case but made a tacti-
    cal decision not to raise anticipation arguments,” the Panel
    explained, “the adversarial system has not failed” and
    “[t]he public interest [wa]s not well-served by the [PTO]
    filling in gaps intentionally left void by” the petitioner. 
    Id.
    The Panel therefore “conclude[d] that, as a policy matter,
    the Board should not have raised the Schacherer anticipa-
    tion ground.” Appx50. Moreover, the Panel stated, this case
    was not one that “present[ed] the potential for issuing sub-
    stitute claims the [PTO] ‘knows to be unpatentable’” be-
    cause the PTO “d[id] not have sufficient information on the
    record of this case . . . to make requisite findings on antici-
    pation.” Appx52. According to the Panel, this case did not
    contain “the sort of readily identifiable and persuasive evi-
    dence of anticipation in the record that would justify the
    Board raising its own grounds of unpatentability.” 
    Id.
    Having determined that the Board should not have it-
    self advanced the ground of anticipation based on
    Schacherer when Hunting Titan raised this ground of un-
    patentability only against the original claims and not the
    proposed substitute claims, the Panel proceeded to con-
    sider in the first instance Hunting Titan’s obviousness “ar-
    guments and cited evidence” raised in its opposition to
    DynaEnergetics’s motion to amend. Appx54. The Panel
    “conclude[d] that [Hunting Titan] ha[d] not set forth an ad-
    equate case of obviousness.” 
    Id.
     Rather, the Panel ob-
    served, Hunting Titan had “merely present[ed] how one or
    more of the various asserted prior art references separately
    teaches the various limitations of proposed substitute
    claims 16–22.” Appx56. It had “provide[d] no discussion of
    a reason to combine or modify the prior art,” and the Panel
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    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH        13
    “decline[d] to piece together [its] arguments” and “develop
    a persuasive theory of unpatentability” on Hunting Titan’s
    behalf. 
    Id.
     Thus, following its holding that “the obviousness
    grounds that [Hunting Titan] purport[ed] to have raised
    [we]re facially insufficient to support a finding of unpatent-
    ability,” the Panel granted the motion to amend.
    Appx56–57.
    Hunting Titan timely appealed the Panel’s decision va-
    cating the Board’s denial of DynaEnergetics’s motion to
    amend. DynaEnergetics timely cross-appealed the Board’s
    decision invalidating its original claims. We have jurisdic-
    tion under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(4)(A).
    II
    We review the Board’s decisions in accordance with the
    Administrative Procedure Act, 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    . HTC Corp.
    v. Cellular Commc’ns Equip., LLC, 
    877 F.3d 1361
    , 1367
    (Fed. Cir. 2017). We therefore “review the Board’s legal
    conclusions de novo and its factual findings for substantial
    evidence.” 
    Id.
     Because “[a]nticipation is a question of fact,”
    we consider whether substantial evidence supports the
    Board’s determination holding the original claims un-
    patentable as anticipated by Schacherer. SynQor, Inc. v.
    Artesyn Techs., Inc., 
    709 F.3d 1365
    , 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2013).
    “Substantial evidence review asks ‘whether a reasonable
    fact finder could have arrived at the agency’s decision’ and
    requires examination of the ‘record as a whole, taking into
    account evidence that both justifies and detracts from an
    agency’s decision.’” Intelligent Bio-Systems, Inc. v. Illumina
    Cambridge Ltd., 
    821 F.3d 1359
    , 1366 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (cita-
    tion omitted). “Where two different conclusions may be
    warranted based on the evidence of the record, the Board’s
    decision to favor one conclusion over the other is the type
    of decision that must be sustained by this court as sup-
    ported by substantial evidence.” In re Chudik, 
    851 F.3d 1365
    , 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (citation omitted).
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    14     HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    A
    We first address DynaEnergetics’s cross-appeal, chal-
    lenging the Board’s decision holding the original claims of
    the ’422 patent unpatentable as anticipated by Schacherer.
    DynaEnergetics primarily takes issue with the Board’s
    finding that Schacherer teaches a detonator assembly that
    is received within a perforating gun assembly. Specifically,
    DynaEnergetics faults the Board for identifying this limi-
    tation as uncontested, fully supported by the record, or ef-
    fectively admitted, and contends that the Board’s conduct
    erroneously shifted the burden of persuasion from Peti-
    tioner to Patent Owner. But the Board identified where in
    the petition Hunting Titan had shown how Schacherer dis-
    closes the uncontested limitations. Appx9. And “[t]he
    Board, having found the only disputed limitations together
    in one reference, was not required to address undisputed
    matters.” In re NuVasive, Inc., 
    841 F.3d 966
    , 974 (Fed. Cir.
    2016).
    For the same reason, we are not persuaded by
    DynaEnergetics’s argument that the Board’s purported
    “failure to analyze the ‘received within’ feature infected its
    construction of the ‘shell’ limitation” and its determination
    that “Schacherer disclosed a shell,” such that “neither is
    supported by substantial evidence.” Cross-Appellant’s
    Opening Br. 25. Moreover, DynaEnergetics’s arguments
    addressing the wireless detonator assembly’s “shell” com-
    ponent—which fault Schacherer’s sub for its size and as-
    sert that this sub “cannot reasonably be said to be
    configured for being received within the perforating gun as-
    sembly” since it is “a large structural element or heavy
    steel tool that [instead] provides a connection between
    guns,” 
    id.
     at 27—overlook the fact that the Board construed
    “shell” to include “casing for housing any component of the
    detonator assembly,” Appx16–17. So, since the shell houses
    at least part of the detonator assembly and since the deto-
    nator assembly is received within the perforating gun
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59      Page: 15   Filed: 03/24/2022
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH       15
    assembly, substantial evidence supports the Board’s find-
    ing that the shell is configured to be received within the
    perforating gun assembly. See Appx15–19.
    Lastly, DynaEnergetics contends that substantial evi-
    dence does not support the Board’s findings that
    Schacherer discloses the claimed “wireless detonator as-
    sembly” because the Board did not satisfactorily explain
    why it dismissed DynaEnergetics’s evidence in favor of
    Hunting Titan’s evidence. But the Board’s explanation was
    more than satisfactory. It expressly disagreed with
    DynaEnergetics’s narrow construction of “detonator as-
    sembly,” specifically noting that “[w]hat DynaEnergetics
    fails to acknowledge is that the claimed ‘wireless,’ ‘without
    using a wired connection,’ and ‘merely by the contact’ limi-
    tations pertain solely to how the detonator assembly as a
    whole forms an electrical connection with the perforating
    gun assembly as a whole, irrespective of how any subcom-
    ponents within each assembly are connected.” Appx15.
    And, in light of its construction, the Board explicitly
    pointed to DynaEnergetics’s failure to provide evidentiary
    support or an explanation for why its position—that “a
    wired connection residing entirely within, and internal to,
    Schacherer’s detonator assembly precludes the assembly
    from being ‘wireless’”—was the correct and necessary one
    for the Board to adopt. Appx16. Substantial evidence sup-
    ports the Board’s determination that the detonator assem-
    bly’s electrical connection with the perforating gun
    assembly does not use a wired electrical connection in
    Schacherer. Appx16.
    For the foregoing reasons, substantial evidence sup-
    ports the Board’s determination that Schacherer antici-
    pates all of the ’422 patent’s original claims.
    B
    Because we affirm the Board’s decision holding the
    original claims unpatentable, we address Hunting Titan’s
    appeal challenging the Panel’s decision to vacate the
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59     Page: 16    Filed: 03/24/2022
    16     HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    Board’s denial of the motion to amend. Hunting Titan con-
    tends that, under Aqua Products, Inc. v. Matal, 
    872 F.3d 1290
    , 1325–26 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (en banc) and Nike, Inc. v.
    Adidas AG, 
    955 F.3d 45
    , 51–52 (Fed. Cir. 2020), the Board
    has a duty to determine the patentability of the proposed
    substitute claims based on the entirety of the record. Hunt-
    ing Titan asserts that the Panel therefore erred in revers-
    ing the Board’s decision finding the proposed claims
    anticipated by Schacherer and further erred in determin-
    ing the patentability of the proposed substitute claims
    based only on its review of Hunting Titan’s opposition to
    the motion to amend. In other words, Hunting Titan argues
    that the Board had an obligation to sua sponte identify pa-
    tentability issues for a proposed substitute claim based on
    the prior art of record, and that the Panel committed legal
    error by vacating the Board’s decision to do so in this case.
    We disagree.
    Neither Aqua Products nor Nike established that the
    Board maintains an affirmative duty, without limitation or
    exception, to sua sponte raise patentability challenges to a
    proposed substitute claim. Nike, 955 F.3d at 51 (“We ad-
    dressed the universe of prior art that the Board should con-
    sider when reviewing a motion to amend in Aqua
    Products. . . . We expressly declined to address, however,
    whether the Board ‘may sua sponte raise patentability
    challenges of amended claims.’” (citation omitted)); id. (“We
    hold today that the Board may sua sponte identify a pa-
    tentability issue for a proposed substitute claim based on
    the prior art of record.” (emphasis added)). Indeed, as the
    Panel correctly pointed out, “Nike resolve[d] the question
    of whether the Board may advance a ground of unpatenta-
    bility that a petitioner does not advance, or insufficiently
    develop[s], against substitute claims proposed in a motion
    to amend.” Appx39. But Nike left unanswered “the circum-
    stances in which the Board should advance such a ground
    of unpatentability in relation to substitute claims proposed
    in a motion to amend.” Appx40. It was this question that
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59      Page: 17    Filed: 03/24/2022
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH        17
    the Panel answered here, and confining the circumstances
    in which the Board should sua sponte raise patentability
    issues was not itself erroneous.
    Notably, we do find problematic the Panel’s reasoning
    behind its decision to confine the Board’s discretion to sua
    sponte raise patentability issues to only rare circum-
    stances. For example, while the adversarial system proves
    useful in IPR proceedings to bring forth evidence the
    agency might not have otherwise discovered, the Panel’s
    substantial reliance on the adversarial system as the basis
    for confining its patentability determination for new claims
    overlooks the basic purpose of IPR proceedings: to reex-
    amine an earlier agency decision and ensure “that patent
    monopolies are kept within their legitimate scope.” Oil
    States Energy Servs., LLC v. Greene’s Energy Grp., LLC,
    
    138 S. Ct. 1365
    , 1374 (2018) (cleaned up). And “[t]he fact
    that Congress has enlisted the assistance of private parties
    does not change their essential character.” Regents of Univ.
    of Minn. v. LSI Corp., 
    926 F.3d 1327
    , 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2019);
    see also 
    id.
     (“[A]lthough these modifications to inter partes
    reexamination make IPR [proceedings] ‘look[] a good deal
    more like civil litigation,’ fundamentally these proceedings
    continue to be a ‘second look at an earlier administrative
    grant of a patent.’” (third alteration in original) (citations
    omitted)).
    Nevertheless, the Panel’s conclusion, at least to the ex-
    tent at issue here, is not inconsistent with Nike and Aqua
    Products. The Panel identified circumstances in which the
    Board should advance “a ground of unpatentability that a
    petitioner did not advance, or insufficiently developed,
    against substitute claims in a motion to amend.” Appx44.
    And it acknowledged that “even where both a petitioner
    and patent owner participate in the motion to amend pro-
    cess, there may be situations where certain evidence of un-
    patentability has not been raised by the petitioner, but is
    readily identifiable and persuasive such that the Board
    should take it up in the interest of supporting the integrity
    Case: 20-2163     Document: 59      Page: 18   Filed: 03/24/2022
    18       HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    of the patent system” (the readily identifiable evidence ex-
    ception). 
    Id.
    Notably, however, the Panel highlighted one example
    in which the readily identifiable evidence exception could
    apply: “where the record readily and persuasively estab-
    lishes that substitute claims are unpatentable for the same
    reasons that corresponding original claims are unpatenta-
    ble.” 
    Id.
     It was on this basis that the Panel concluded that
    the Board should not have considered whether the pro-
    posed substitute claims were anticipated by Schacherer,
    and the Panel therefore confined its own consideration to
    the grounds of unpatentability advanced by Hunting Titan
    in its opposition to DynaEnergetics’s motion to amend. In
    other words, the Panel did not preclude the Board from con-
    sidering the entirety of the record, but instead determined
    that certain evidence of anticipation—evidence that Hunt-
    ing Titan contends on appeal should have been considered
    when determining patentability—was not readily identifi-
    able and persuasive. Yet, on appeal, Hunting Titan did not
    challenge the Panel’s decision as an abuse of discretion.
    That is, Hunting Titan failed to argue that the Panel mis-
    applied the readily identifiable evidence exception. Be-
    cause Hunting Titan raised no such argument, it is
    forfeited. 2
    2  It does strike us as odd, however, that the Panel
    determined that the Schacherer anticipation ground was
    not readily identifiable and persuasive such that the Board
    should have sua sponte raised this ground of unpatentabil-
    ity against DynaEnergetics’s proposed substitute claims.
    Indeed, the Board specifically found the proposed substi-
    tute claims unpatentable for the same reasons it found the
    corresponding original claims unpatentable. Moreover,
    when the Board finds an original claim unpatentable as an-
    ticipated by a prior art reference, it would seem to follow
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59     Page: 19   Filed: 03/24/2022
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH      19
    We must therefore affirm the Panel’s decision granting
    the motion to amend. We emphasize, however, that this af-
    firmance is based only on this narrow ground. We are not
    determining the patentability of the proposed substitute
    claims, nor are we deciding whether the Panel abused its
    discretion in determining that the Schacherer anticipation
    ground was not readily identifiable and persuasive such
    that the Board should have sua sponte raised this ground
    of unpatentability. Likewise, we are not opining on the
    other limitations that the Panel placed on the Board’s abil-
    ity to advance patentability issues not raised by a peti-
    tioner, and whether those limitations are consistent with
    
    35 U.S.C. § 318
    . Cf. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc. v. Prisua
    Eng’g Corp., 
    948 F.3d 1342
    , 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2020). Finally,
    we do not decide whether the Board has an independent
    obligation to determine patentability of proposed substi-
    tute claims. These questions need not be answered to re-
    solve the appeal before us.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the Board’s decision holding claims 1–15 un-
    patentable, and we also affirm the Panel’s decision grant-
    ing DynaEnergetics’s motion to amend the ’422 patent to
    add new claims 16–22.
    AFFIRMED
    COSTS
    No costs.
    that the Board should begin by first asking if the corre-
    sponding proposed substitute claim overcomes the ground
    on which it found the original claim unpatentable.
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59     Page: 20   Filed: 03/24/2022
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.,
    Appellant
    v.
    DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH,
    Cross-Appellant
    ANDREW HIRSHFELD, PERFORMING THE
    FUNCTIONS AND DUTIES OF THE UNDER
    SECRETARY OF COMMERCE FOR
    INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND DIRECTOR OF
    THE UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK
    OFFICE,
    Intervenor
    ______________________
    2020-2163, 2020-2191
    ______________________
    Appeals from the United States Patent and Trademark
    Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2018-
    00600.
    ______________________
    PROST, Circuit Judge, concurring.
    I join the majority’s opinion, agreeing that Hunting Ti-
    tan didn’t preserve a challenge to the Precedential Opinion
    Panel’s (“POP”) application of its standard for when it is
    (and isn’t) appropriate for the Board to sua sponte raise
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59       Page: 21   Filed: 03/24/2022
    2       HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    patentability issues as to new claims. 1 I write separately
    to explain why, had that challenge been preserved, it likely
    would have succeeded—and why I’m troubled by how the
    PTO is handling this issue, including with a recently en-
    acted regulation.
    I
    In evaluating new (i.e., proposed substitute or
    amended) claims, “the Board should not be constrained to
    arguments and theories raised by the petitioner in its peti-
    tion or opposition to the motion to amend.” Nike, Inc. v.
    Adidas AG, 
    955 F.3d 45
    , 51 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (emphasis
    added). We’ve reasoned:
    It makes little sense to limit the Board, in its role
    within the agency responsible for issuing patents,
    to the petitioner’s arguments in this context. Ra-
    ther, based on consideration of the entire record,
    the Board must determine whether the patent
    owner’s newly-presented, narrower claims are . . .
    “unpatentable in the face of the prior art cited in
    the IPR.”
    
    Id.
     at 51–52 (emphasis added) (quoting Aqua Prods., Inc.
    v. Matal, 
    872 F.3d 1290
    , 1314 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (en banc)
    (plurality opinion)). Although we haven’t delineated the
    outer bounds of any independent Board duty to ensure that
    new patent claims are, in fact, patentable before they issue,
    we have observed that “the text, structure, and history of
    the IPR [s]tatutes . . . indicate Congress’s unambiguous
    1   This preservation failure was discussed exten-
    sively at oral argument, during which Hunting Titan’s
    counsel could not—despite repeated opportunities—iden-
    tify where its opening brief made this challenge. See Oral
    Arg. at 2:31–4:49, 5:59–7:28, 11:58–15:04, 1:03:27–1:07:37,
    No. 20-2163, https://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/de-
    fault.aspx?fl=20-2163_11012021.mp3.
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59     Page: 22    Filed: 03/24/2022
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH        3
    intent to permit the [Board] to review [new] claims more
    broadly than” original claims. Uniloc 2017 LLC v. Hulu,
    LLC, 
    966 F.3d 1295
    , 1304 (Fed. Cir. 2020); 
    id. at 1306
     (not-
    ing the absence of “any other context under Title 35—e.g.,
    original applications, reexaminations, reissue, etc.—in
    which the [PTO] is required or authorized to newly issue a
    patent claim without ever having determined that the par-
    ticular claim meets the statutory requirements for patent-
    ability”).
    The POP nevertheless constrained the Board’s ability
    to raise its own patentability issues as to new claims. It
    identified just three situations in which the Board could do
    so: (1) where the petitioner has ceased participating in the
    proceeding altogether; (2) where the petitioner chooses not
    to oppose the patent owner’s motion to amend; and
    (3) where, although the petitioner has opposed, it has failed
    to raise unpatentability evidence that is nonetheless “read-
    ily identifiable and persuasive.” Hunting Titan, Inc. v.
    DynaEnergetics Eur. GmbH, IPR2018-00600, 
    2020 WL 3669653
    , at *6 (P.T.A.B. July 6, 2020). The third situa-
    tion—“readily identifiable and persuasive” evidence—is at
    issue here, given that Hunting Titan opposed DynaEner-
    getics’s motion to amend.
    Whatever the “readily identifiable and persuasive”
    standard means, it should have let the Board do what it did
    here: evaluate whether the prior-art reference that antici-
    pated the original claims also anticipated the new claims.
    Such an evaluation can hardly be deemed overly zealous or
    creative on the Board’s part. Indeed, among potential un-
    patentability bases to raise sua sponte, this would seem to
    be square one. But the POP disagreed. It forbade the
    Board from making that basic evaluation. The POP thus
    denied three administrative patent judges—who had de-
    voted extensive resources to analyzing this prior-art refer-
    ence—the ability to use that acquired expertise in making
    their own patentability determinations before letting new
    claims out the door. I don’t see how the POP’s decision in
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59        Page: 23   Filed: 03/24/2022
    4       HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    this regard is reasonable. It also appears inconsistent with
    Nike, where we approved the Board’s sua sponte unpatent-
    ability finding based on a prior-art reference not even men-
    tioned in the petitioner’s opposition. 2 See Nike, 955 F.3d
    at 48–53.
    But, because Hunting Titan forfeited a challenge to the
    POP’s application of its new standard here, review of that
    standard’s application must await another day.
    II
    The POP stressed the adversarial aspect of IPRs when
    justifying its “readily identifiable and persuasive” con-
    straint on the Board. Hunting Titan, 
    2020 WL 3669653
    ,
    at *5–6, *9. But it acknowledged that motions to amend
    don’t always have an adversary. For example, the peti-
    tioner might have dropped out or declined to oppose. Ac-
    cordingly, the POP framed the “readily identifiable and
    persuasive” constraint as applying only to situations where
    the petitioner opposes a motion to amend:
    To be sure, there may be circumstances where the
    adversarial system fails to provide the Board with
    potential arguments for the unpatentability of the
    proposed substitute claims. As noted above, the
    Supreme Court in Cuozzo specifically addressed
    one such situation, in which the petitioner has
    ceased to participate in the proceeding altogether.
    A similar situation may exist where a petitioner
    chooses not to oppose the motion to amend. And
    2    Here, Hunting Titan cited and discussed the
    Schacherer reference throughout its opposition to
    DynaEnergetics’s motion to amend. J.A. 518–47. But it
    argued obviousness (not anticipation), and as to one of the
    newly added claim elements, the Board found a disclosure
    in Schacherer that Hunting Titan’s opposition did not spe-
    cifically identify.
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59      Page: 24     Filed: 03/24/2022
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH          5
    even where both a petitioner and patent owner par-
    ticipate in the motion to amend process, there may
    be situations where certain evidence of unpatenta-
    bility has not been raised by the petitioner, but is
    readily identifiable and persuasive such that the
    Board should take it up in the interest of support-
    ing the integrity of the patent system, notwith-
    standing the adversarial nature of the proceedings.
    
    Id. at *6
     (emphasis added) (citation omitted). 3 The clear
    implication was that the Board would not be so constrained
    when a motion to amend is unopposed. Id.; see Nike,
    955 F.3d at 51 (expressing concern over limiting the PTO’s
    “ability to examine the new claims” in cases where the pe-
    titioner has not opposed).
    The PTO, however, has since enacted a regulation that
    seemingly applies the “readily identifiable and persuasive”
    constraint to all motions to amend—opposed or not. The
    following provision now applies 4:
    (d) Burden of Persuasion. On a motion to amend:
    (1) A patent owner bears the burden of per-
    suasion to show, by a preponderance of the
    evidence, that the motion to amend com-
    plies with the requirements of paragraphs
    (1) and (3) of 
    35 U.S.C. § 316
    (d), as well as
    3      The PTO’s brief in this appeal adopted this same
    framing. E.g., Intervenor’s Br. 17 (“These circumstances
    include where the petitioner ceases to participate in the
    proceeding altogether or does not oppose the motion to
    amend; and, even when the petitioner opposes, where the ev-
    idence of unpatentability is readily identifiable and persua-
    sive . . . .” (emphasis added)).
    4      This provision applies to all motions to amend filed
    on or after January 20, 2021, so it doesn’t apply in this case.
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59       Page: 25     Filed: 03/24/2022
    6      HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), (b)(1), and (b)(2) of
    this section;
    (2) A petitioner bears the burden of persua-
    sion to show, by a preponderance of the ev-
    idence, that any proposed substitute claims
    are unpatentable; and
    (3) Irrespective of paragraphs (d)(1) and (2)
    of this section, the Board may, in the inter-
    ests of justice, exercise its discretion to
    grant or deny a motion to amend only for
    reasons supported by readily identifiable
    and persuasive evidence of record. In doing
    so, the Board may make of record only
    readily identifiable and persuasive evi-
    dence in a related proceeding before the
    [PTO] or evidence that a district court can
    judicially notice. Where the Board exer-
    cises its discretion under this paragraph,
    the parties will have an opportunity to re-
    spond.
    
    37 C.F.R. § 42.121
    (d) (emphasis added); see Rules of Prac-
    tice to Allocate the Burden of Persuasion on Motions to
    Amend in Trial Proceedings Before the Patent Trial and
    Appeal Board, 
    85 Fed. Reg. 82,923
    , 82,924 (Dec. 21, 2020)
    (setting forth the effective date).
    The PTO’s remarks accompanying this regulation’s en-
    actment note some situations where the “readily identifia-
    ble and persuasive” constraint would apply. For example,
    if the patent owner’s briefing fails to expressly address or
    establish every statutory and regulatory requirement for a
    motion to amend (as 
    37 C.F.R. § 42.121
    (d)(1) mandates),
    the Board may nonetheless determine that such require-
    ments are met—but “only when there is readily identifiable
    and persuasive evidence” showing as much. 85 Fed. Reg.
    at 82,927. Likewise, where a petitioner opposes a motion
    to amend “but fails to raise certain evidence of
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59      Page: 26   Filed: 03/24/2022
    HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH       7
    unpatentability that is [nonetheless] readily identifiable
    and persuasive,” the Board may take up that evidence,
    “notwithstanding the adversarial nature of the proceed-
    ings.” Id.
    The prospect of applying the “readily identifiable and
    persuasive” constraint to unopposed motions to amend,
    however, is what particularly troubles me. Although the
    POP indicated that the constraint wouldn’t apply in such
    circumstances, see Hunting Titan, 
    2020 WL 3669653
    , at *6,
    and although the PTO maintains that this regulation “cod-
    ifie[s]” or “embod[ies] the policy determination articulated
    by the POP here,” Intervenor’s Br. 17–18, 29–30, the regu-
    lation appears to apply the constraint to all motions to
    amend—opposed or not. Indeed, the PTO’s counsel at oral
    argument adopted that view, maintaining that the regula-
    tion imposes the “readily identifiable and persuasive” con-
    straint even in unopposed situations. Oral Arg. at
    21:03–13; see 
    id.
     at 19:39–59. According to counsel, the
    reason for doing so is “to encourage the parties to remain
    in and oppose the motion [to amend].” Oral Arg. at
    19:48–57. But an adverse petitioner needs no extra encour-
    agement to oppose a motion. And if the petitioner is no
    longer adverse—e.g., having settled or satisfied itself that
    an amendment removes the threat of infringement—it’s
    unclear how the PTO’s policy would affect the petitioner’s
    incentive to oppose.
    Because the regulation makes no caveat for unopposed
    motions, the Board may find its hands tied (or its head
    forced into the sand) even when no one is around to oppose
    a new patent monopoly grant.
    *   *   *
    The “basic purpose[]” of IPRs is “to reexamine an ear-
    lier agency decision,” thus “help[ing] protect the public’s
    paramount interest in seeing that patent monopolies are
    kept within their legitimate scope.” Cuozzo Speed Techs.,
    Case: 20-2163    Document: 59     Page: 27    Filed: 03/24/2022
    8      HUNTING TITAN, INC.   v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH
    LLC v. Lee, 
    579 U.S. 261
    , 279–80 (2016) (cleaned up). That
    purpose is particularly salient here, given that the Board
    usually evaluates the patentability of new claims only after
    it has recognized the PTO’s original error in issuing un-
    patentable claims. I don’t see the reasonableness of a pol-
    icy that seriously hinders the Board’s basic efforts to avoid
    making the same error twice.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20-2163

Filed Date: 3/24/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/24/2022