MITCHELL S. GOLDBERG, District Judge.
Plaintiff, Larry Junker, has filed a one-count complaint for design patent infringement against Defendants, Medical Components, Inc. and Martech Medical Products, Inc. (collectively, "MedComp"). Plaintiff alleges that Defendants have violated 35 U.S.C. § 271, et seq. by selling medical devices embodying Plaintiff's patented invention registered with the United States Patent and Trademark Office ("PTO"). Defendants raise various affirmative defenses in their Third Amended Answer, and have included two counterclaims for invalidity (Count I) and non-infringement (Count II).
Before me is Plaintiff's motion to dismiss Defendants' third, ninth, and tenth affirmative defenses, as well as Defendants' first counterclaim for invalidity. For the reasons that follow, Plaintiff's motion will be granted in part and denied in part.
Plaintiff is the owner of U.S. Design Patent No. D450,839, entitled "Handle for Introducer Sheath" (the "D'839 patent"). Plaintiff applied for this patent on February 7, 2000, and the PTO issued the patent on November 20, 2001. Plaintiff applied for reissuance of the D'839 patent on July 20, 2003. The PTO eventually re-examined the D'839 patent, and reissued the patent to Plaintiff in 2008. (Defs.' 3d Am. Answer, pp. 4-5.)
While not dispositive to the motion before me, the circumstances surrounding Plaintiff initially obtaining the D`839 patent were the subject of a prior lawsuit in the Northern District of Texas, which reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
Plaintiff filed the instant lawsuit on August 8, 2013. On February 26, 2015, toward the end of discovery, Defendants filed a motion for leave to file a Third Amended Answer based on newly discovered evidence. Defendants explained that evidence produced late in discovery contradicted Plaintiff's assertion that he was the "sole inventor" of the D'839 patent, thus raising issues that the patent was procured through fraud and/or inequitable conduct. Defendants sought leave to include these allegations in a Third Amended Answer by way of both affirmative defenses and an amended counterclaim for invalidity. (Defs.' Mot. for Leave at 2, Ex. A.)
On May 20, 2015, the Honorable L. Felipe Restrepo granted in part Defendants' motion to amend. Judge Restrepo allowed Defendants to file a Third Amended Answer, which included a ninth affirmative defense of inequitable conduct, and a tenth affirmative defense of fraud. (
Judge Restrepo's Order acknowledged that Plaintiff maintained the right to challenge the legal sufficiency of Defendants' newly-added allegations. (
Plaintiff does not specify which subsection of Rule 12 entitles him to dismissal of Defendants' affirmative defenses and first counterclaim. He asserts that the "only plausible inference" that can be derived from Defendants' allegations does not support a claim for either fraud or inequitable conduct. (Pl.'s Mot. to Dismiss 13). This phrasing suggests that he seeks relief under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)—failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Nevertheless, with respect to their affirmative defenses, Defendants construe Plaintiff's filing as a motion to strike under Rule 12(f). (Defs.' Resp. 4.)
To survive a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a complaint must "contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to `state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face.'"
To determine the sufficiency of a complaint under
Additionally, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b) mandates that a party plead "with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud."
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f) "provides the means to challenge the sufficiency of affirmative defenses."
The parties devote a substantial portion of their briefs to whether Defendants' affirmative defenses are subject to the same "plausibility" standard of review as their counterclaims. Indeed, there is a split among the circuit courts regarding whether or not the "plausibility" standard applies to affirmative defenses.
The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals has held that in a patent infringement case, a motion to dismiss is purely a procedural mechanism, and thus the law of the regional circuit should ordinarily control.
The Federal Circuit has stated that "inequitable conduct, while a broader concept than fraud, must be pled with particularity" pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 9(b).
Multiple district courts within this circuit—applying Federal Circuit precedent—have held that affirmative defenses and counterclaims for inequitable conduct "rise or fall together."
The same is true for Defendants' fraud allegations.
With this legal framework in mind, I now address the legal sufficiency of Defendants' Third Amended Answer.
"A charge of inequitable conduct based on a failure to disclose will survive a motion to dismiss only if the [counterclaim] recites facts from which the court may reasonably infer that a specific individual both knew of invalidating information that was withheld from the PTO and withheld that information with a specific intent to deceive the PTO."
As such, "the substantive elements of inequitable conduct are: (1) an individual associated with the filing and prosecution of a patent application made an affirmative misrepresentation of a material fact, failed to disclose material information, or submitted false material information; and (2) the individual did so with a specific intent to deceive the PTO."
With respect to the first element, "as a general matter, the materiality required to establish inequitable conduct is but-for materiality. . . . Hence, in assessing the materiality of a withheld reference, the court must determine whether the PTO would have allowed the claim if it had been aware of the undisclosed reference."
Regarding the second element, specific intent, the Federal Circuit has observed that:
In sum, the inquiry becomes: whether Defendants have alleged sufficient facts (accepted as true) from which I can reasonably infer that Plaintiff knew he was withholding material information from the PTO at the time of his application for the D'839 patent (and at the time of its reissue), and/or whether Plaintiff provided false information to the PTO about the true inventorship. If so, I must also assess whether these factual allegations are independently sufficient to lead a reasonable person to infer that Plaintiff had the specific intent to deceive the PTO, taking into account any objective indications of good faith on the part of Plaintiff.
The essence of Defendants' allegations with respect to Plaintiff's fraud and inequitable conduct is that Plaintiff stole a third party's drawings in 1999, filed those stolen drawings with the PTO as if they were his own, and knowingly deceived the PTO by filing a declaration that he was the sole inventor of the claimed design. Defendants maintain that but for the omission of this material information, and the accompanying deception, the patent would neither have been originally issued nor subsequently reissued. (Defs.' 3d Am. Answer, pp. 4-6.)
More specifically, Defendants claim that Plaintiff requested certain drawings from Richard Gillespie in 1999 to assist with Plaintiff's sales and marketing efforts—with the understanding that these drawings were confidential and the exclusive property of Xentek Medical, Inc. Defendants allege that Plaintiff took those drawings and filed them, as if he had created them, with his patent application submitted to the PTO on February 7, 2000. Defendants maintain that Plaintiff used the drawings to obtain the patent without Gillespie, Eddings, or Xentek's permission, and that Plaintiff ultimately obtained the D'839 patent as a result of this alleged plagiarism. Defendants highlight that Plaintiff submitted a signed declaration to the PTO which stated, "I believe I am the original, first and sole inventor of the subject matter which is claimed and for which a design patent is sought on the above entitled invention." (Defs.' 3d Am. Answer, pp. 4-6.) (emphasis added.)
Defendants contend that Plaintiff further perpetuated his misconduct by filing a second certification with the reissue application in which he again certified: "I believe I am the original, first and sole inventor of the subject matter which is described and claimed in the above identified United States design patent and in the foregoing specification and for which invention I solicit a Reissue patent." (
Plaintiff argues in his motion to dismiss that Defendants' ninth affirmative defense and first counterclaim do not adequately plead inequitable conduct because they fail to allege the "high degree of materiality and intent required to support an inequitable conduct claim." (Pl.'s Mot. to Dismiss at 4.) Plaintiff asserts that merely because Defendants claim other inventors (i.e., Eddings and Gillespie) contributed prior art features to the final design, nowhere do Defendants allege that Plaintiff was aware of these contributions, thought they were relevant to patentability, and that Plaintiff specifically intended to defraud the PTO. (
In their response in opposition to Plaintiff's motion to dismiss, Defendants argue that:
(Defs.' Resp. at 13) (brackets in original).
The Federal Circuit has held that "when named inventors deliberately conceal a true inventor's involvement, the applicants have committed inequitable conduct and the patent is unenforceable[.]"
In reviewing Defendants' allegations, and assuming their veracity, as I am required to do at this stage, I conclude that Defendants have adequately pled inequitable conduct. Plaintiff's plagiarizing another's drawings, filing them as his own, and submitting a sworn certification to the PTO indicating the same, plausibly suggests that he provided materially false information to the PTO (i.e., he was not the sole inventor, and there were in actuality other inventors). Additionally, based on the facts alleged, it is reasonable to infer that he did so with the specific intent to deceive the PTO. Accordingly, Plaintiff's motion will be denied as to Defendants' ninth affirmative defense and first counterclaim premised on inequitable conduct.
"Applied to patent prosecution, fraud requires (1) a false representation or deliberate omission of a fact material to patentability, (2) made with the intent to deceive the patent examiner, (3) on which the examiner justifiably relied in granting the patent, and (4) but for which misrepresentation or deliberate omission the patent would not have been granted."
Plaintiff points out in his motion to dismiss that Defendants' tenth affirmative defense for fraud is "subject to the same standards of inequitable conduct[.]" (Pl.'s Mot. to Dismiss at 12.) I have previously ruled that ". . . the language of
Plaintiff further argues that Paragraphs 8, 9, and 10 of Defendants' first amended counterclaim attempt to include general statutory invalidity arguments, and that Judge Restrepo did not grant leave to file these allegations. However, Paragraphs 8 and 9 state—verbatim—what was included in Defendants' previous Answer. (
Despite Judge Restrepo's unambiguous ruling that Defendants were only permitted to incorporate allegations of fraud and/or inequitable conduct into their Third Amended Answer, Defendants included an additional footnote within Paragraph 8 that relates to Plaintiff's patent being invalid due to an "on sale" bar. (3d Am. Answer ¶ 8 n.3.) Defendants never sought leave to add this footnote, and Judge Restrepo did not grant them leave to incorporate this footnote. To the contrary, he expressly forbade it. Accordingly, this footnote will be stricken.
Plaintiff further asks that the first bulleted sub-paragraph within Paragraph 10 be stricken because it includes "incorrect inventorship" invalidity allegations that were not contemplated by Judge Restrepo's Order granting leave to file a Third Amended Answer. I agree with Plaintiff that this paragraph does not pertain to fraud or inequitable conduct. As such, this sub-paragraph will be stricken. However, the second and third bulleted paragraphs within Paragraph 10 will not be stricken because they pertain to inequitable conduct and fraud, and Judge Restrepo granted Defendants leave to include these allegations.
Plaintiff correctly points out that Defendants added a footnote to their current third affirmative defense, which was not included in their proposed Third Amended Answer attached to their motion for leave. (
Plaintiff correctly points out that "one cannot infringe an invalid patent." (Pl.'s Mot. to Dismiss at 18.) To the extent Defendants allege in Paragraph 14 of their second amended counterclaim that they have not infringed the D'839 patent because it is invalid due to Plaintiff's fraud and/or inequitable conduct, this paragraph will be stricken because it is redundant of those allegations already set forth in the ninth and tenth affirmative defenses, and first amended counterclaim for invalidity.
Plaintiff's motion to dismiss will be granted in part and denied in part. The motion will be granted such that: footnote "1" within Defendants' Third Affirmative Defense will be stricken; footnote "3" within Defendants' First Amended Counterclaim will be stricken; the first bulleted sub-paragraph within Paragraph 10 of Defendants' First Amended Counterclaim will be stricken; and, the allegations pertaining to fraud and/or inequitable conduct in Paragraph 14 of Defendants' Second Amended Counterclaim will be stricken. The Motion will be denied in all other respects.
An appropriate Order follows.