Science Applications International Corp. v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •                                      CORRECTED
    In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    SCIENCE APPLICATIONS
    INTERNATIONAL CORP.,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    THE UNITED STATES,
    No. 17-cv-825
    Defendant,
    Filed Under Seal: October 19, 2021
    and
    Publication: October 27, 2021 1
    MICROSOFT CORPORATION,
    Intervenor-Defendant,
    and
    L3 TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,
    Third-Party Defendant.
    Stephen R. Smith, Cooley LLP, Washington, D.C. for Plaintiff. With him on the briefs are
    DeAnna D. Allen and Emily Terrell, Washington, D.C.; Douglas P. Lobel, Cooley, LLP, Reston,
    Virginia; and William D. Belanger and Gwendolyn Tawresey, Pepper Hamilton LLP,
    Washington, D.C.
    William Carl Bergmann, Baker & Hostetler, LLP, Washington, D.C., for Third-Party Defendant.
    With him on the briefs are Michael Anderson and Cassandra Simmons, Baker & Hostetler, LLP,
    Washington, D.C.
    1
    This Memorandum and Order was filed under seal in accordance with the Protective Order
    entered in this case (ECF No. 34) and was publicly reissued after the parties informed this Court
    that no redactions would be necessary for public release. (ECF No. 223.) The sealed and public
    versions of this Memorandum and Order are identical, other than the publication date and this
    footnote.
    MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
    This case is entering its fourth year of litigation before the trial court, and familiarity with
    prior proceedings in this action is presumed. See January 19, 2018 Order Denying Motion to
    Dismiss (ECF No. 14); April 21, 2021 Order Granting in Part and Denying in Part Plaintiff’s
    Motion to Strike (ECF No. 172); August 6, 2021 Claim Construction Opinion (ECF No. 192)
    (Claim Constr. Op.). On August 6, 2021, this Court issued its Claim Construction Opinion,
    holding indefinite several key claim terms in Plaintiff Science Applications International
    Corporation’s (SAIC’s) asserted patents. See Claim Constr. Op. at 70-91. These indefinite terms
    pervade the claims in SAIC’s asserted patents. Indeed, they are so widespread that, when the
    parties jointly stipulated to invalidity of the claims containing those indefinite terms, only one of
    the four asserted patents survived. See Joint Stipulation of Invalidity and Motion for Partial
    Summary Judgment Regarding the Asserted Patents (ECF No. 208). As is typical in patent cases,
    SAIC indicated that it will likely appeal this Court’s claim construction given its impact. See Sept.
    15, 2021 Joint Status Conference Transcript (ECF No. 205) (Status Conference Tr.) at 13:20-25
    (“When we appeal, we need to make sure it’s teed up correctly”).
    That SAIC may appeal this Court’s Claim Construction Opinion is unremarkable.
    However, before embarking on its journey to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
    (Federal Circuit), SAIC effectively seeks to supplement the record. SAIC contends that additional
    discovery regarding a license to Third-Party Defendant L3 Technologies, Inc. (L3) from non-party
    BAE Systems, Inc. (BAE) (the L3-BAE license) and a patent included in that license may uncover
    evidence that would necessitate a reversal of the Court’s claim construction ruling concerning the
    terms “registering” and “in registration with.” See id. at 13:10-14:7. Specifically, SAIC alleges
    that this “newly discovered” extrinsic evidence will purportedly demonstrate that one of ordinary
    2
    skill in the art would understand that the referenced invalid claim terms have a definite meaning.
    Id at 13:1-19.
    The history of how this extrinsic evidence suddenly became an issue post-claim
    construction merits recitation. After SAIC served discovery requests seeking this evidence from
    L3 and non-party BAE, L3 filed a motion for a protective order seeking to “prohibit[] SAIC from
    further claim construction discovery.” L3 Motion for Protective Order (ECF No. 210) (L3’s Mot.)
    at 1. The protective order that L3 seeks is broad. L3 argues that expanded discovery related to
    the L3-BAE license and one patent referenced within it will impose an undue burden on L3 to
    review and produce documents “that are irrelevant to claim construction, cumulative of what the
    Court has already considered, or which SAIC already had ample opportunity to present.” Id. at 3.
    In response, SAIC argues that L3’s proposed protective order is overbroad and will inappropriately
    enable Defendants to avoid discovery related to damages and liability where evidence relevant to
    those issues is also relevant to claim construction. See Opposition to L3 Motion for Protective
    Order (ECF No. 215) (SAIC’s Resp.) at 1. Finally, SAIC urges this Court to deny L3’s motion
    because it lacks the certification required by United States Court of Federal Claims Rule (Rule or
    RCFC) 26. Id. On October 14, 2021, this Court conducted oral argument on the Motion. See Oct.
    14, 2021 Hearing on L3’s Motion for Protective Order Transcript (ECF No. 219) (Hearing Tr.).
    For the reasons explained below, L3’s Motion for a Protective Order is GRANTED IN PART.
    BACKGROUND
    This case assumed its current tack after a prolonged claim construction process, including
    extensive, multi-year discovery. SAIC filed this patent infringement suit against the United States
    of America (Government) in June 2017. See Complaint for Patent Infringement (ECF No. 1). The
    Government and SAIC disclosed their respective claim construction experts in November 2018.
    3
    See Defendant’s Disclosure of Claim Construction Expert (ECF No. 48); SAIC’s Disclosure of
    Claim Construction Expert (ECF No. 49). Microsoft intervened in this case as a defendant in April
    2019. See Microsoft Corporation’s Motion Intervene (ECF No. 59); Order Granting Microsoft’s
    Motion to Intervene (ECF No. 60). Microsoft, the Government, and SAIC filed a joint claim
    construction statement in June 2019, in which the parties identified claim terms for construction.
    See Joint Claim Construction Statement (ECF No. 63). In that statement, Defendants alleged that
    the terms “registering” and “in registration with” in the relevant patents are indefinite. See Joint
    Claim Construction Statement, Ex. A (ECF No. 63-1) at 8.
    The parties filed opening claim construction briefs on August 15, 2019. See Microsoft’s
    Opening Claim Construction Brief (ECF No. 87); Government’s Opening Claim Construction
    Brief (ECF No. 89); SAIC’s Claim Construction Brief (ECF No. 90). Two months later, the parties
    filed responsive claim construction briefs. See Microsoft’s Responsive Claim Construction Brief
    (ECF No. 95); SAIC’s Responsive Claim Construction Brief (ECF No. 96); Government’s
    Responsive Claim Construction Brief (ECF No. 97). After several delays — including a stay
    related to inter partes review, delays attributable to the Covid-19 pandemic, and subsequent
    reassignment of the case in 2020 to the present judge — L3 joined the case as a third-party
    defendant in July 2020. See L3’s Answer to Complaint (ECF No. 131); Memorandum and Order
    Granting Notice to L3 (ECF No. 120); see also Order Granting Partial Stay (ECF No. 102); Order
    Reassigning Proceedings (ECF No. 112).
    In October 2020, the Court granted L3 an opportunity to file supplemental claim
    construction briefing on up to five terms since L3 was not a party when the Government, SAIC,
    and Microsoft had filed their claim construction briefs. See Sept. 4, 2020 Scheduling Order (ECF
    No. 141); L3’s Opening Claim Construction Brief (ECF No. 148). Like the other defendants in
    4
    this action, L3 asserted, inter alia, that the terms “registering” and “in registration with” in the
    patents at issue are indefinite. L3’s Opening Claim Construction Brief at 21-24. On the same day
    that L3 filed its brief, SAIC submitted supplemental briefing on the terms for construction that had
    L3 proposed. See SAIC’s Supplemental Claim Construction Brief (ECF No. 149). L3 and SAIC
    filed their respective responsive claim construction briefs on November 20, 2020. See SAIC’s
    Responsive Claim Construction Brief to L3 (ECF No. 151); L3’s Responsive Claim Construction
    Brief (ECF No. 152). On December 15, 2020, this Court held a Markman hearing. See Markman
    Hearing Transcript (ECF No. 159).
    According to SAIC, L3 was negotiating a patent license agreement with BAE during
    supplemental claim construction briefing. See SAIC’s Resp. at 3. L3 and BAE executed the
    license agreement three days after L3’s and SAIC’s submission of their responsive claim
    construction briefs. See L3’s Mot., Ex. 1 (ECF No. 210-1) at 6. That license covers several
    patents, but the only one SAIC contends is relevant to this motion is 
    U.S. Patent No. 9,210,384
    (the ’384 patent). See 
    id.
     The ’384 patent is directed to “[a] system and method for real time
    registration of images . . . .” SAIC Resp., Ex. A (ECF No. 215-1) (’384 patent) at Abstract. Like
    SAIC’s asserted patents, the ’384 patent uses the terms “registering” and “registration” in its
    claims. See 
    id. at 6:2-15
     (Claim 1), 6:33-36 (Claim 6), 6:62-7:10 (Claim 10). The patent
    application that ultimately issued as the ’384 patent was published on March 20, 2014 — well
    before SAIC initiated this lawsuit. See ’384 patent at pg. 2. In March 2019, SAIC also received
    a copy of the ’384 patent from BAE in discovery. See L3’s Mot., Ex. 4 (ECF No. 210-4) at 1
    (listing document number BAE‐ENVG‐17377 as part of a March 5, 2019 production); L3’s Mot.,
    Ex. 2 (ECF No. 210-2) at 13 (noting that the ’384 patent was produced at BAE-ENVG-0017377).
    5
    Despite that the ’384 patent was publicly available to SAIC before it initiated this case, and
    that SAIC received a copy of the ’384 patent early in this case, SAIC did not cite the ’384 patent
    to the Court in support of its arguments that the “registering” and “in registration with” terms are
    definite. See generally SAIC’s Claim Construction Brief; SAIC’s Responsive Claim Construction
    Brief; SAIC’s Supplement Claim Construction Brief; SAIC’s Responsive Claim Construction
    Brief to L3. Instead, however, SAIC cited several other patents — including one owned by L3 —
    to suggest that its proposed construction of the terms “registering” and “in registration with” is
    consistent with how one of ordinary skill in the art would use the term. See SAIC’s Responsive
    Claim Construction Brief to L3 at 20 (“Lastly, L3’s insistence that the ‘registering’ claim terms
    are indefinite contradicts the fact that SAIC’s use of these terms is consistent with the way persons
    of ordinary skill in the art use them, including Defendants and their contractors.” (emphasis in
    original)).
    SAIC alleges it remained in the dark about L3’s license with BAE, covering the ‘384 patent
    until June 24, 2021 — six months after this Court conducted its Markman hearing — when L3
    produced a copy of the L3-BAE license. See SAIC’s Resp. at 3; Status Conference Tr. at 13:7-9
    (SAIC noting that the ’384 patent was disclosed to it “in June, late June” 2021), 15:21-16:2 (noting
    that the L3-BAE license covering the ’384 patent was not brought to the Court’s attention before
    issuance of its Claim Construction Opinion). Although SAIC possessed a copy of the L3-BAE
    license 43 days before this Court issued its August 6, 2021 Claim Construction Opinion, SAIC did
    not bring the license, or any issues related to the ‘384 patent, to this Court’s attention. See SAIC’s
    Resp. at 3; Claim Constr. Op. It was not until over two weeks after the Claim Construction Opinion
    issued — a total of 60 days after SAIC received the license — that SAIC even hinted to this Court
    the L3-BAE license or the ’384 patent might have had relevance, however remote, to claim
    6
    construction. See Aug. 23, 2021 Joint Status Report (ECF No. 197) at 7. Indeed, rather than
    straightforwardly filing a motion for reconsideration, SAIC raised the issue of the ’384 patent and
    the L3-BAE license in an unusual way — in a joint status report wherein the parties were to
    propose to the Court a schedule for further proceedings. 
    Id. at 1
    .
    In the joint status report, SAIC alleged that the L3-BAE license was highly relevant to
    claim construction because the claims and disclosure of the ’384 patent “are directly and
    fundamentally inconsistent with the Defendants’ indefiniteness arguments.” 
    Id. at 7
    . Three weeks
    later, SAIC informed the Court at a September 15, 2021 status conference that it may opt to move
    for reconsideration of the Court’s Claim Construction Opinion at some unknown, future point, but
    only after conducting further post-Opinion discovery relating to claim construction. See Status
    Conference Tr. at 16:15-17:19. The parties also informed the Court at the September 15, 2021
    status conference that SAIC had recently served requests for production on L3 and BAE seeking
    information about the ’384 patent and the L3-BAE license. See 
    id. at 12:16-18
    ; L3’s Mot, Ex. 1;
    L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 (ECF No. 210-2).
    SAIC’s requests for production to L3 and BAE are nearly identical. Compare L3’s Mot,
    Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP Nos. 34-36) with L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 13-14 (BAE RFP Nos. 1-3). SAIC
    requested all documents related to the ’384 patent, including documents related to the decision to
    enter into the L3-BAE license, the inclusion of the ’384 patent in the license, and negotiations for
    the terms of the license. See L3’s Mot., Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 34); L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 13 (BAE
    RFP No. 1). SAIC also requested “[a]ll Documents relating to any analysis of the ’384 patent,
    including but not limited to its scope, its validity, and its applicability to the Instrumentalities.”
    See L3’s Mot, Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 35); L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 14 (BAE RFP No. 2). Finally,
    SAIC requested all documents related to communications between L3, BAE, the Government, and
    7
    any other entity, regarding the ’384 patent, the L3-BAE license, and any communications
    regarding those documents. See L3’s Mot., Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 36); L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 14
    (BAE RFP No. 3).
    SAIC explicitly moored these post-claim construction requests for production to its
    potential future challenge to the Court’s construction of the terms “registration” and “in
    registration with.” Indeed, during a recent status conference, SAIC expressly linked its requests
    to its quest for further extrinsic evidence — all of which, remarkably, SAIC had in hand well prior
    to issuance of this Court’s Claim Construction Opinion. As SAIC’s counsel stated during the
    September 15, 2021 status conference:
    BAE and L3 entered into a license agreement for a patent, the ’384 patent, that talks
    about in claims registering two different images from two different cameras. And
    we think it has less disclosure than the patents that Your Honor found invalid. . . .
    We think there is more evidence in the record about what people think are skilled
    in the art on registration. . . . We’re in a situation where now we have evidence that
    is disclosed after claim construction 2 that we’re going to bring to Your Honor’s
    attention at the appropriate time because we need it for the appellate record if we’re
    going to appeal.
    Status Conference Tr. at 13:1-19. SAIC further explained that in addition to outstanding discovery
    requests concerning this extrinsic evidence (i.e., the L3-BAE license and the ‘384 patent), it had
    not yet received source code. See 
    id. at 16:23-17:12
    . SAIC contends that source code will refer
    to registration in a manner consistent with its unsuccessful claim construction positions. 
    Id.
     While
    the parties discussed damages at the September 15, 2021 status conference in the context of
    whether to bifurcate proceedings, damages were not discussed in relation to SAIC’s discovery
    requests about the ’384 patent and the L3-BAE license. See 
    id. at 12:10-26:23
    . L3 filed the present
    2
    Later in the status conference, however, SAIC’s counsel explained that it had received such
    information prior to issuance of this Court’s Claim Construction Opinion. See Status Conference
    Tr. at 13:7-9 (SAIC stating that the ’384 patent was disclosed to it “in June, late June” 2021);
    Claim Construction Op. (issued August 6, 2021).
    8
    motion two weeks after that status conference. To date, SAIC has not filed a motion to reconsider
    this Court’s Claim Construction Opinion.
    APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARDS
    This Court may issue an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment,
    oppression, or undue burden or expense if good cause exists. RCFC 26(c)(1). “Good cause
    requires a showing that the discovery request is considered likely to oppress an adversary or might
    otherwise impose an undue burden.” Forest Prods. Nw., Inc. v. United States, 
    453 F.3d 1355
    ,
    1361 (2006). “[T]he party seeking the protective order must show good cause by demonstrating a
    particular need for protection.” Cipollone v. Liggett Grp., Inc., 
    785 F.2d 1108
    , 1121 (3d Cir.1986).
    Generic statements that discovery is burdensome or oppressive do not suffice; the moving party
    must show how each request is not relevant, overly broad, or unduly burdensome by offering
    evidence of the burden. Lakeland Partners, L.L.C. v. United States, 
    88 Fed. Cl. 124
    , 133 n.6
    (2009).
    Further, Rule 26(b)(2)(c) authorizes a court to impose limits if: “(i) the discovery sought is
    unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or . . . (ii) the party seeking discovery has had ample
    opportunity by discovery to obtain the information [sought.]”               RCFC 26(b)(2)(C)(i)-(ii).
    “[D]iscovery, like all matters of procedure, has ultimate and necessary boundaries . . . .
    [L]imitations come into existence when the inquiry touches upon the irrelevant . . .” Kellogg
    Brown & Root Svcs., Inc. v. United States, 
    117 Fed. Cl. 1
    , 5-6 (quoting Hickman v. Taylor, 
    329 U.S. 495
    , 507-08 (1947)) (alterations in original).
    Under this Court’s Rules, motions for a protective order “must include a certification that
    the movant has in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with other affected parties in an
    9
    effort to resolve the dispute without court action.” RCFC 26(c)(1). L3 did not include a
    certification in its motion indicating that a meet and confer had occurred. See L3’s Mot. The
    Court does not look lightly on noncompliance with its Rules. However, in this circumstance it is
    evident to the Court from its prior status conference that the parties were at an obvious impasse on
    whether SAIC’s claim construction discovery is appropriate at this stage of the litigation, and it is
    further evident that L3’s motion presents a pressing issue that this Court will have to confront. See
    Status Conference Tr. Given the prior delays in this case, 3 and the clear previous discussion of
    this issue among the parties to no effect, the most efficient resolution is to address SAIC’s
    discovery requests now.
    DISCUSSION
    L3 argues that a protective order is necessary because SAIC continues to request claim
    construction discovery — after extensive discovery and this Court’s Claim Construction Opinion
    — seeking what would amount to irrelevant and cumulative evidence.                 L3’s Mot. at 2.
    Specifically, L3 argues that SAIC’s September 13, 2021 requests for production are irrelevant
    because the L3-BAE license does not mention the indefinite terms and only mentions the ’384
    patent in a list of patents being licensed. 
    Id.
     L3 also argues that the requests for production seek
    evidence that is cumulative of extrinsic evidence submitted to the Court during claim construction.
    Id. at 2-3. Finally, L3 argues that SAIC’s pursuit of broad fact discovery improperly seeks source
    3
    In addition to the stay and reassignment referenced in the Background, this action involved
    several previous reassignments to other judges, all of which appears to have delayed proceedings.
    See Apr. 5, 2018 Transfer Order (ECF No. 24) (transferring case from the Honorable Eric G.
    Bruggink to the Honorable Mary Ellen Coster Williams); June 21, 2019 Transfer Order (ECF No.
    67) (transferring case from the Honorable Mary Ellen Coster Williams to the Honorable Richard
    A. Hertling); July 23, 2019 Recusal Order (ECF No. 83) (recusing the Honorable Richard A.
    Hertling and transferring the case back to the Honorable Mary Ellen Coster Williams).
    10
    code. Id. at 3. SAIC responds that its discovery requests relate to issues beyond claim construction
    and that further discovery on the L3-BAE license is warranted given its purportedly recent
    disclosure. See SAIC’s Resp. at 1-3. It also contends that licensing communications are relevant
    to damages while source code is relevant to the infringement analysis. Id. at 2. Having considered
    the parties’ arguments, the Court finds it appropriate to issue a protective order precluding further
    claim construction discovery but notes that SAIC shall not be precluded from propounding
    discovery legitimately connected to other relevant, remaining issues remaining in this suit.
    L3 has satisfied its burden under RCFC 26(c)(1) by demonstrating that SAIC’s discovery
    requests, tailored to gather new, post-claim construction evidence, are irrelevant and cumulative.
    Lakeland Partners, 88 Fed. Cl. at 133 n.6 (“The objecting party bears the burden of demonstrating
    specifically how, despite the broad and liberal construction afforded the federal discovery rules,
    each [request] is not relevant” (internal citations and quotations omitted)). The cumulative and
    duplicative nature of the evidence related to the ’384 patent also supports an order under Rule
    26(b)(2)(C) limiting SAIC’s ability to further conduct claim construction discovery. Evidence
    touching solely on claim construction is irrelevant to issues that remain pending before this Court.
    SAIC was clear that its recent discovery requests to L3 and BAE are directed at supplementing the
    record on claim construction, despite the availability of extensive claim construction discovery
    and access to the license and ‘384 patent well before this Court resolved claim construction. At a
    status conference with this Court, SAIC explained that it served its requests for production of
    documents related to the ’384 patent and the L3-BAE license because it believes that “there is
    more evidence in the record about what people think are skilled in the art on registration.” Status
    Conference Tr. at 13:10-13:12. That may be so, but SAIC possessed the ’384 patent both before
    Markman discovery closed on July 18, 2019 and before the October 14, 2020 deadline to submit
    11
    supplemental claim construction briefing with L3. See May 6, 2019 Scheduling Order (ECF No.
    60); Sept. 4, 2020 Scheduling Order. (ECF No. 141). The appropriate time to submit that evidence
    was a year ago.
    L3’s disclosure of its license from BAE several months after the Markman hearing does
    not imbue SAIC’s requested discovery with new relevance. First, it is of no moment that SAIC
    failed to appreciate the alleged importance of the ’384 patent until after it received a copy of the
    L3-BAE license. See, e.g., GoDaddy.com LLC v. RPost Commc’ns Ltd., No. CV-14-00126, 
    2015 WL 6468370
     at *2 (D. Ariz. Oct. 27, 2015) (“In its briefing on this motion, GoDaddy does not
    contend that it was wholly unaware of the Supplemental Exhibits at the time it filed its Responsive
    Claim Construction Brief. Rather, GoDaddy ostensibly argues that it was oblivious as to the
    relevance of the Supplemental Exhibits at the time of filing. Such an argument does not result in
    a finding of ‘good cause.’” (emphasis in original)). As noted, the ’384 patent was in the public
    domain prior to the inception of this case. See ’384 patent at pg. 2 (listing Date of Patent as Dec.
    8, 2015). Further, BAE produced a copy of the ’384 patent to SAIC well before the deadline for
    the parties to submit extrinsic evidence on claim construction. See L3’s Mot., Ex. 4 (ECF No.
    210-4) at 1 (listing document number BAE‐ENVG‐17377 as part of a March 5, 2019 production);
    L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 (ECF No. 210-2) at 13 (noting that the ’384 patent was produced at BAE-ENVG-
    0017377). Additionally, SAIC possessed a copy of the L3-BAE license 43 days before this Court
    issued its claim construction opinion, and SAIC chose not to alert the Court of, what SAIC now
    seeks to characterize as, newly-discovered, relevant evidence. It is inappropriate to burden
    Defendants with post-Markman claim construction discovery now that SAIC regrets its decision
    to forgo citing the ’384 patent during claim construction briefing.
    12
    Limiting discovery on this evidence is particularly appropriate where, as here, the evidence
    is, at most, cumulative. SAIC claims that the discovery it seeks is relevant because the ’384
    patent’s claims and disclosure indicate how the “registering” terms were understood to one of
    ordinary skill in the art. But SAIC already offered several other patents as extrinsic evidence for
    the same reason. Compare SAIC’s Responsive Claim Construction Brief to L3 at 20 (discussing
    that a patent assigned to L3 uses the term “registration” consistent with SAIC’s proposed
    construction) with Status Conference Tr. at 13:10-19 (suggesting that evidence related to the ’384
    patent and its licensing history show “what people think [that] are skilled in the art on
    registration”). SAIC has not demonstrated that the ’384 patent adds anything new. Nor could it.
    If anything, the ’384 patent’s insight into the terms in the patents in suit adds less than the other
    cited patents because it is assigned to a third party, while at least one of the patents that SAIC
    previously cited on this issue is assigned to L3. See SAIC’s Responsive Claim Construction Brief
    to L3 at 20 (discussing that a patent assigned to L3 uses the term “registration” consistent with
    SAIC’s proposed construction). Because such evidence is duplicative of evidence SAIC cited to
    the Court during claim construction, and since SAIC did not timely pursue such discovery before
    the claim construction hearing, SAIC is precluded from seeking discovery related to the ’384
    patent now.
    SAIC’s discovery requests related to the history of the L3-BAE license are more
    complicated. The license relates to technology that arguably has some overlap with the accused
    products.     This suggests the license may be relevant to evaluating damages.         It would be
    inappropriate to limit damages discovery at this point in the litigation. Accordingly, related to the
    L3-BAE license, it is necessary for the Court to issue a targeted order protecting Defendants from
    13
    the burden of irrelevant discovery while also allowing SAIC the full extent of discovery on issues
    such as infringement and damages.
    That SAIC did not receive a copy of the L3-BAE license until six months after the
    Markman hearing is inconsequential at this litigation stage, as the license is irrelevant to whether
    the “registering” terms are indefinite. SAIC suggests that cases like Procter & Gamble Co. v.
    CAO Grp., Inc., No. 1:13-cv-337, 
    2014 WL 2116994
     (S.D. Ohio May 21, 2014), and Bancorp
    Servs., L.L.C. v. Hartford Life Ins. Co., 
    359 F.3d 1367
     (Fed. Cir. 2004), support an inference that
    L3’s payment to license a patent that includes the term “registering” is a representation at odds
    with L3’s argument that SAIC’s patent claims asserting similar terms are indefinite. See SAIC’s
    Resp. at 3. SAIC is mistaken. Both cases explain that it is the defendant’s, rather than a third
    party’s, use of a term that is relevant. See Procter & Gamble, 
    2014 WL 2116994
     at *4 (explaining
    how defendant’s advertisements described the accused product in terms like those that it alleged
    lacked discernable meaning in the asserted patents, and concluding that “[d]efendant’s documents
    support a finding that the ‘unobtrusive’ phrase has a discernable meaning and is not indefinite”
    (emphasis added)); Bancorp, 
    359 F.3d at 1376
     (“[T]he evidence of defendants’ knowledge and
    use of the term prior to patenting is relevant to show that the term was in use and had a discernible
    meaning to at least some persons practicing in the field.” (emphasis added)). Here, the ’384
    patent’s use of the term “registering” is not a statement by L3; L3 is not the owner of the patent,
    and L3 did not prosecute the patent. See SAIC Resp., Ex. A at pg. 2. L3 is a mere licensee.
    Nor should L3’s license concerning the ’384 patent be construed as a statement that all of
    the terms in the ’384 patent are definite. While parties enter into agreements assuming that the
    licensed patents are valid, and while many patent owners will warrant as much, parties also
    understand that an issued patent is merely presumed valid. See 
    35 U.S.C. § 282
    (a). At most, L3’s
    14
    position in this case might suggest that it overpaid for a license that may include patents with one
    or more invalid claims. L3’s risk tolerance for licensing BAE patents that may potentially include
    invalid claims does not shed any light on the meaning of the “registering” terms in the patents at
    issue in the present action. Even if timely raised, which it was not, SAIC’s proposed line of
    discovery is exceedingly unlikely to produce new evidence relevant to claim construction.
    Accordingly, a protective order is appropriate to shield Defendants and third parties from the costs
    of such burdensome, irrelevant discovery.
    SAIC’s conduct after receiving the L3-BAE license further undercuts SAIC’s claim that
    this allegedly new evidence would be necessary for this Court to reconsider its claim construction.
    Forty-three days elapsed between when SAIC received the license and when the Court issued its
    Claim Construction Opinion. See supra Background, p.6. SAIC could have brought the license
    to the Court’s attention if it believed that it would affect this Court’s claim construction decision.
    It chose not to do so. SAIC’s inaction suggests that it did not believe the L3-BAE license was
    important for claim construction until the Court issued an Opinion holding key terms indefinite.
    Even after the Court issued its Claim Construction Opinion, SAIC did not present the
    license issue to this Court with any urgency. It only brought the license to this Court’s attention
    in a joint status report. Rather than file a motion for reconsideration based on the allegedly newly-
    disclosed license, SAIC instead seeks further discovery, presumably because it understands that
    the license itself is not the significant type of evidence that could support a reconsideration of this
    Court’s Claim Construction Opinion. This Court’s discretion to enter a protective order is
    designed for just this scenario: where a party wants to embark on a fishing expedition based on
    irrelevant evidence that itself is not likely to lead to any relevant evidence. See Monarch Assur.
    P.L.C. v. United States, 
    244 F.3d 1356
    , 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (explaining that “the trial court is
    15
    not expected to, nor should it, simply allow plaintiffs to embark on a wide-ranging fishing
    expedition in hopes that there may be gold out there somewhere”).
    However, as L3 acknowledges and this Court agrees, discovery concerning other issues
    such as damages must remain available to SAIC at this stage in the proceedings. See Hearing Tr.
    at 21:5-8; see also In re MSTG, Inc., 
    675 F.3d 1337
    , 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (holding documents
    pertinent to the issue of a reasonable royalty). Accordingly, if a discovery request is directed
    towards evidence with relevance to both claim construction and other issues such as damages,
    Defendants must produce it. See Hearing Tr. at 8:3-13, 21:6-8. For example, SAIC’s requests for
    source code, to the extent otherwise relevant, would be permissible under this protective order
    because SAIC will likely need to review the source code to prove its infringement case.
    Additionally, SAIC may pursue discovery on the economic terms of the L3-BAE license because
    that information may be relevant to damages.       This protective order prohibits SAIC from
    conducting further discovery that is relevant solely to claim construction. Going forward in
    discovery, consistent with this Memorandum and Order, SAIC must clearly articulate the
    relevance of any discovery that Defendants in good faith challenge as solely relevant to claim
    construction issues.
    Finally, as noted supra, based on SAIC’s own statements that its September 15, 2021
    discovery requests are intended to further develop claim construction arguments premised on the
    ’384 patent, SAIC may not seek discovery related to the ’384 patent. See Status Conference Tr. at
    13:1-25, 16:23-17:12; supra Background, pp. 7-8.
    16
    CONCLUSION
    For good cause shown, L3’s Motion for a Protective Order (ECF No. 210) is GRANTED
    IN PART. Consistent with this Memorandum and Order, SAIC is prohibited from further
    discovery related solely to claim construction. The parties are ORDERED to meet and confer to
    discuss proposed terms for a supplemental protective order consistent with the terms of this
    Memorandum and Order. Following that meeting, the parties shall FILE a joint proposed
    protective order by October 28, 2021.
    If the parties cannot agree on the terms of the joint proposed protective order, the parties
    shall highlight in a Joint Status Report any such specific terms and the basis for such disagreement.
    The Joint Status Report shall also include a meet and confer certification consistent with this
    Court’s Rules.
    The terms of the joint proposed protective order shall not preclude SAIC from obtaining
    discovery concerning relevant remaining issues in this action, including by way of example,
    infringement and damages. Additionally, the joint proposed protective order shall prohibit SAIC
    from pursuing discovery on topics that SAIC indicates, or has indicated, were directed towards
    claim construction, such as the following topics outlined in SAIC’s September 13, 2021 requests
    for production to L3 and BAE:
    •   Analysis of the ’384 patent’s scope, see e.g., L3’s Mot., Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 35); L3’s
    Mot., Ex. 2 at 14 (BAE RFP No. 2);
    •   Analysis of the ’384 patent’s validity, see e.g., L3’s Mot., Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 35); L3’s
    Mot., Ex. 2 at 14 (BAE RFP No. 2);
    •   Analysis of the ’384 patent’s applicability to the accused instruments, see e.g., L3’s Mot.,
    Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 35); L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 14 (BAE RFP No. 2);
    •   Communications concerning the ’384 patent, see e.g., L3’s Mot., Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No.
    36); L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 14 (BAE RFP No. 3); and
    17
    •   Communications concerning a summary or assessment of the ’384 patent, see e.g., L3’s
    Mot., Ex. 1 at 7 (L3 RFP No. 36); L3’s Mot., Ex. 2 at 14 (BAE RFP No. 3).
    The parties are directed to CONFER and FILE a NOTICE by October 26, 2021,
    attaching a proposed public version of this Sealed Memorandum and Order, with any competition-
    sensitive or otherwise protected information redacted.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    s/Eleni M. Roumel
    ELENI M. ROUMEL
    Judge
    October 19, 2021
    Washington, D.C.
    18