TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Defendant TASER International, Inc.'s Motion for Leave to Amend Invalidity Contentions (ECF No. 152). Defendant requests leave to amend its invalidity contentions to add a single prior art reference that it recently discovered and which it claims is highly material. Defendant submits that it has shown good cause for the requested amendment by diligently searching for prior art since the inception of this case. Plaintiff Digital Ally, Inc. opposes the motion, arguing that Defendant was not diligent in searching for the prior art which is the basis for its amendment, and therefore has not shown good cause to amend its invalidity contentions at this stage of the case, after claim construction issues have been fully briefed and shortly prior to the claim construction hearing. The Court finds Defendant has shown good cause under D. Kan. Pat. Rule 3.5(b) to amend its invalidity contentions. Defendant's motion is granted.
Plaintiff filed this patent infringement case on January 14, 2016, alleging that body-worn camera products sold by Defendant infringe Plaintiff's patent, U.S. Patent Nos. 8,781,292 ("the `292 patent"). Plaintiff later amended its complaint on February 2, 2016 and March 18, 2016, to add another claim for patent infringement with respect to U.S. Patent Nos. 9,253,452 ("the `452 patent") and claims alleging Defendant violated federal and state antitrust and unfair competition laws.
On May 9, 2016, the Court entered the Initial Patent Scheduling Order (ECF No. 40), which set May through August 2016 deadlines for the parties to serve infringement and invalidity contentions, claim terms requiring construction, preliminary claim construction, and their joint claim construction statement.
Plaintiff served its infringement contentions on May 17, 2016.
A Second Patent Scheduling Order (ECF No. 73) was entered on September 16, 2016, moving the claim construction briefing deadlines to October and November 2016, and continuing the claim construction hearing. The claim construction proposals were fully briefed, including the filing of Defendant's Sur-reply Brief on Claim Construction (ECF No. 97), as of November 23, 2016. The deadline for completion of fact discovery was set 60 days after the Court's claim construction ruling.
In December 2016 and January 2017, Defendant filed two petitions for inter partes review ("IPR") of the `292 patent,
On August 31, 2017, Plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss its `292 patent infringement claims and the parties filed a joint report advising on the status of the pending IPR petitions. The parties advised that on June 6, 2017, the PTAB instituted review of several claims as to the `292 patent petition, but declined to institute an IPR of the second `292 patent IPR petition and both `452 patent IPR petitions.
On November 17, 2017, the Court denied Defendant's request to continue the stay with respect to the `452 patent.
District of Kansas Patent Local Rule 3.5 governs the amendment of infringement and invalidity contentions. Subsection (a) allows one amendment of invalidity contentions as a matter of right if amended infringement contentions have been served or the amending party has a good faith belief that amendment is required by the court's claim construction order.
D. Kan. Pat. Rule 3.5(b) provides the following non-exhaustive examples of circumstances that typically will, absent undue prejudice to the non-moving party, support a finding of good cause:
Subsection (c) of D. Kan. Pat. Rule 3.5 requires two prerequisites before the court will entertain any motion seeking leave to amend invalidity contentions. First, counsel for the moving party must confer or make reasonable efforts to confer. Second, the moving party must arrange for and hold a telephone conference with the court before filing the motion. As the Court indicated at the December 19, 2017 status conference, Defendant has met both D. Kan. Pat. Rule 3.5(c) prerequisites for its motion.
Defendant submits that it has shown good cause to amend its invalidity contentions with respect to the `452 patent to add a prior art reference to World Intellectual Property Organization ("WIPO") International Publication WO/2014/000161 A1 titled "Apparatus and Method for Cooperative Electronic Data Collection" (the "Xu reference"), which it discovered on September 20, 2017. Defendant argues that the Xu reference is highly relevant prior art because it invalidates the remaining claims of the `452 patent, whether considered by itself or in combination with other references. Defendant contends it has shown diligence in its efforts to search for prior art and in seeking leave to amend, and Plaintiff will suffer no prejudice by the proposed amendment.
As an initial matter, the Court considers what law governs the validity and interpretation of its local patent rules, including the specific rule governing the amendment of infringement or invalidity contentions. As announced by the Federal Circuit, in O2 Micro International Ltd. v. Monolithic Power Systems, Inc.,
District of Kansas Patent Rule 3.5(b)(1) provides the example of a party's "recent discovery of material, prior art despite its earlier diligent search" as a circumstance that will typically support a finding of good cause, absent undue prejudice to the non-moving party. Under Federal Circuit law, "good cause" for allowing amendments to infringement or invalidity contentions requires a showing of diligence by the party seeking to amend its contentions.
Diligence is the critical issue in the good cause determination.
Defendant contends it was diligent in searching for the prior art serving as the basis for its request to amend its invalidity contentions. It attaches the Declaration of its counsel, John Garretson, who describes Defendant's efforts to search for prior art:
Defendant discovered the Xu reference on September 20, 2017, as a result of prior art searches it conducted after the PTAB issued decisions on the IPR petitions.
Plaintiff argues that Defendant was not diligent in discovering the Xu reference and has provided no explanation why it did not discover or could not have discovered the Xu reference during its prior art searches leading up to service of its invalidity contentions. Plaintiff points out that the Xu reference was publicly available in the searchable WIPO database two years before Plaintiff filed this lawsuit in January 2016, and two and a half years before Defendant served its invalidity contentions on July 5, 2016. Plaintiff also argues that Defendant's suggestion that the failure to locate the Xu reference earlier was due to its international patent classification number, which has a different subclass than the `452 patent, undercuts its argument that the Xu reference is material prior art.
Based upon Defendant's reported search efforts for prior art, as described in the Garretson Declaration, the Court finds Plaintiff has shown diligence in searching for prior art, including the Xu reference, which it did not find until September 20, 2017. Defendant's search efforts include the hiring of five professional search firms and consultants to conduct eight different searches in many different patent/application databases and non-patent literature databases covering technical papers, trade journals, white papers, presentations, and other publicly available materials. Defendant's prior art search efforts started before Plaintiff filed this lawsuit and continued until it filed the four IPR petitions in December 2016 and January 2017. After the PTAB's decisions on the IPR petitions in July and August 2017, decisions which changed the focus of this litigation from the `292 patent to the `452 patent, Defendant conducted further searches for prior art and discovered the Xu reference.
The Court is not persuaded by Plaintiff's argument that if Defendant had conducted a diligent search, it would necessarily have uncovered this publicly available patent. Although a diligent search should reveal well-known prior art references,
Plaintiff argues that Defendant provides no explanation why it failed to discover or could not have discovered the Xu prior art in its earlier searches, which by its own admission included the WIPO database, the database containing the Xu reference. Defendant has not provided an explanation, but offers that its failure to find the Xu reference in earlier searches may be due to the Xu reference's international patent classification number, which is a slightly different subclass than on the face of the `452 patent. Patent cases have noted that although hindsight is often "20/20," identifying and evaluating prior art can be difficult, and new information learned in discovery can lead a party to understandably reevaluate evidence found earlier.
Plaintiff also argues that Defendant should not be allowed to amend its invalidity contentions to add a prior art reference after taking a "wait and see" approach on the success of its IPR petitions and not conducting any prior art searches for seven months in 2017 while the IPR petitions were pending. Defendant counters that to the extent Plaintiff is arguing it should have continued to do extensive prior art searching while the case was stayed, the case law does not support Plaintiff's position, citing two cases, THX, Ltd. v. Apple, Inc., and Richtek Technology Corp. v. uPI Semiconductor Corp.
Plaintiff does not cite, and the Court has not located any case, where the court found a party seeking to amend its contentions was not diligent because it failed to continue searching for prior art while the case was stayed. The two cases cited by Defendant suggest the opposite, that a failure to search for prior art while a case is stayed should not be considered evidence of a lack of diligence. As noted by the Richtek court, the purpose of a stay is "to avoid expenses that might ultimately prove moot."
Defendant must also show it was diligent in seeking leave to amend its invalidity contentions. Defendant claims it discovered the Xu reference on September 20, 2017 and its counsel sent an email to Plaintiff's counsel on October 31, 2017, attaching the Xu reference and Defendant's proposed supplemental invalidity contentions with respect to the `452 patent, which included 44 pages of element-by-element charts. Counsel for Defendant then inquired whether Plaintiff would consent to the supplementation request. Upon learning that Plaintiff opposed the request, counsel for Defendant had a meet-and-confer call with Plaintiff's counsel on November 21, 2017. That same day, Defendant advised the Court of its intent to request leave to serve amended invalidity contentions and requested a telephone conference.
Defendant notified Plaintiff of its discovery of the Xu reference and its proposed supplemental invalidity contentions approximately 40 days after it found the Xu reference. It then acted promptly in bringing the matter to the Court's attention and requesting a conference. Defendant has acted diligently in moving for leave to amend its invalidity contentions.
Plaintiff argues that Defendant's request to amend is motivated by gamesmanship, as shown by Defendant acknowledging that the only reason it now seeks to inject newly discovered prior art into the case is because its timely-disclosed prior art was rejected in the IPR proceedings. Plaintiff argues that Defendant should not be given a second chance to redo their invalidity contentions after waiting to see if it prevailed on its IPR petitions.
The Court does not find Defendant's request to amend its invalidity contentions for a single prior art reference to be motivated by gamesmanship. The local rule specifically contemplates the circumstances under which Defendant seeks to amend its contentions (the recent discovery of material prior art). Defendant has shown it was diligent in searching for the prior art that is the basis for its amendment. That Defendant resumed searching for prior art after the PTAB issued its decisions on the IPR petitions does not persuade the Court that Defendant's motion is motivated by gamesmanship.
Having found Defendant was diligent in searching for the prior art and in seeking leave to amend its invalidity contentions, the Court considers whether Defendant's proposed amendment will unduly prejudice Plaintiff.
Defendant argues that Plaintiff will suffer no prejudice by its proposed amendments because Plaintiff still has ample time to conduct discovery regarding the prior art reference added in its amended invalidity contentions. Defendant states that it provided notice of the Xu reference to Plaintiff on October 31, 2017, and fact discovery will not close for at least another five months. Defendant acknowledges that the parties have already filed claim construction briefing, but asserts that the Xu reference will not raise any new claim construction issues.
Plaintiff relies heavily on its argument that Defendant was not diligent in discovering the Xu reference and therefore does not allocate much of its allowed eight pages
The Court is not convinced that Plaintiff will be unduly prejudiced by Defendant's amendment of its invalidity contentions to add one prior art reference. Defendant previously identified 24 prior art publications in its initial invalidity contentions, which included patents, international patent applications, white papers, and product documents. It also provided over 800 pages of exemplary claim charting.
Allowing Defendant to amend its invalidity contentions at this pre-claim construction stage of the case should not disrupt the case schedule. Fact discovery is not set to close until 60 days after the Court's claim construction ruling. Plaintiff therefore has time to conduct any discovery regarding this prior art and before any expert reports or dispositive motions are due. The pretrial conference and trial has not yet been set. No substantive motions will be impacted or rendered moot by allowing Defendant's amended invalidity contentions. Although significant time has passed since Defendant served its invalidity contentions on July 5, 2016, the case was stayed during most of 2017 (from March 20, 2017 until November 17, 2017) while Defendant's IPR petitions were pending. The Court thus finds Plaintiff will not be unduly prejudiced by Defendant's proposed amendment of its invalidity contentions.
IT IS SO ORDERED.