MOORE, Circuit Judge.
X2Y Attenuators, LLC (X2Y) appeals from the final determination of the International Trade Commission (ITC) that Intel Corporation and other intervenors (Intel) did not violate 19 U.S.C. § 1337 because Intel's products were not covered by X2Y's asserted patents. Because the ITC correctly construed the relevant claim terms, we affirm.
The asserted patents, U.S. Patent Nos. 7,609,500 ('500 patent), 7,916,444 ('444 patent), and 8,023,241 ('241 patent) are familially related. The technology disclosed in the asserted patents relates to structures for reducing electromagnetic interference in electrical circuits. The patented inventions use shielding electrodes to reduce the undesirable buildup of charge, known as "parasitic capacitance," between electrodes used for conduction. '444 patent Abstract, col. 2 ll. 36-40, col. 4 ll. 60-65, col. 9 ll. 5-40. In particular, the patents disclose alternating arrangements of shielded and shielding electrodes. '500 patent Figs. 1A, 1B; see Intervenor's Br. 19 (annotated by Intel and reproduced below); Appellant's Br. 5 (annotated by X2Y and reproduced below).
Although it is not asserted, the parties treat claim 26 of the '444 patent as illustrative:
'444 patent claim 26 (emphases added). At the ITC, the parties treated the '444 patent claim term "third electrode," '241 patent claim term "center electrode" (see, e.g., '241 patent claim 14), '500 patent claim term "first ground plane," (see, e.g., '500 patent claim 1), and several other claim terms collectively as "electrode terms" or "center ground plane terms." See J.A. 131-32 ("[E]ach of the asserted claims contains a term from a group that X2Y characterizes as the `electrode' terms, and respondents characterize as `central ground plane' terms.").
X2Y filed a complaint in the ITC accusing Intel of unlawful importation of certain microprocessor products. The parties disputed whether the electrode terms were limited to the so-called "sandwich" configuration — an arrangement of three electrodes in which a center conductor is flanked by paired differential, or oppositely charged, conductors. See '500 patent col. 10 ll. 20-22 (describing "electrostatic suppression or minimization of parasitics originating from the sandwiched differential conductors"); '444 patent col. 11 ll. 64-65 (describing "sandwiching pairs of electrically opposing complementary pathways"); see also '500 patent col. 14 ll. 4-11 ("The various attachment schemes described
The ITC resolved the dispute in favor of Intel. It adopted the Administrative Law Judge's construction of the electrode terms as requiring "a common conductive pathway electrode positioned between paired electromagnetically opposite conductors." J.A. 36; see J.A. 131-34. This construction was based on specification disavowal — for example, the statement in the '500 patent that the sandwich configuration is "an essential element among all embodiments or connotations of the invention," '500 patent col. 19 ll. 22-23, and a statement incorporated by reference into the '444 patent that this configuration is a "feature[] universal to all the embodiments," U.S. Patent No. 5,909,350 ('350 patent) col. 20 l. 16.
We review de novo the ITC's legal determinations, including those relating to claim interpretation. Gemstar-TV Guide Int'l, Inc. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 383 F.3d 1352, 1360 (Fed.Cir.2004) (citation omitted).
X2Y argues that the ITC erred in its construction of the electrode terms. X2Y contends that the ITC improperly read several functional and structural limitations into the meaning of the term "electrode." It contends that the plain meaning of "electrode" denotes a single conductor rather than three conductors, let alone a three-conductor sandwich structure having paired electromagnetically opposite conductors flanking the central conductor. X2Y argues that claim 26 of the '444 patent recites the physical role of each of the electrodes "separate and apart from any electrical characteristics ... created when the arrangement is connected in a circuit." Appellant's Br. 27-28.
X2Y also argues that the specifications of the asserted patents contradict the constructions. X2Y contends that, for example, the '444 patent discloses that the electrodes on either side of a center conductor may be "electrically null, electrically complementary,... or electrically opposite," which, it argues, suggests that the claims should not be limited to "electrically opposite" conductors. '444 patent col. 5 ll. 7-11. X2Y further contends that the ITC improperly relied on the alleged disclaimers in some of the priority patents because the asserted patents are only related to those patents as continuations-in-part.
Finally, X2Y argues that the statements relied upon by the ITC do not constitute
We conclude that the ITC correctly construed the electrode terms. The patents' statements that the presence of a common conductive pathway electrode positioned between paired electromagnetically opposite conductors is "universal to all the embodiments" and is "an essential element among all embodiments or connotations of the invention" constitute clear and unmistakable disavowal of claim scope. See GE Lighting Solutions, LLC v. AgiLight, Inc., 750 F.3d 1304, 1308-09 (Fed.Cir.2014). The standard for finding disavowal, while exacting, was met in this case. Id. at 1308.
Specifically, we have held that labeling an embodiment or an element as "essential" may rise to the level of disavowal. Id. at 1309. Here, not only does the specification state that the "center common conductive pathway electrode" flanked by two differential conductors is "essential," but it also spells out that it was an "essential element among all embodiments or connotations of the invention." '500 patent col. 19 ll. 22-23 (emphasis added); see id. Fig. 2; id. col. 18 l. 13, ll. 60-61; id. col. 19 ll. 24-25.
The '350 patent's statement that the sandwich configuration is a "feature[] universal to all the embodiments" reinforces this conclusion. '350 patent col. 20 l. 16. Like the "essential element" label, this phrase demonstrates a clear intention to limit the claim scope "using words or expressions of manifest exclusion or restriction." Teleflex, Inc. v. Ficosa N. Am. Corp., 299 F.3d 1313, 1324 (Fed.Cir.2002). The relevant passage does include the permissive language that "the material having predetermined electrical properties may be one of a number in any of the embodiments." '350 patent col. 20 ll. 17-19. But the specification further explains that "[n]o matter which material is used, the combination of common ground conductive plates and electrode conductive plates creates a plurality of capacitors to form a line-to-line differential coupling capacitor between and two line-to-ground decoupling capacitors from a pair of electrical conductors." Id. col. 20 ll. 22-27 (emphasis added). Thus, although the passage states that the material may vary, it also explains that the general sandwich configuration remains the same because it is a "feature[] universal" to the invention. This is a clear and unmistakable disavowal of claim scope.
X2Y's argument that some of the disclaimers are inapplicable because they appear only in priority patents to which the asserted patents are only related as continuations-in-part is without merit on the facts of this case. First, the "essential element" disavowal explicitly appears in one of the asserted patents, the '500 patent. Second, the asserted '500 and '444 patents incorporate by reference the priority '350 patent (which includes the "features universal" disavowal), and the '444 patent also incorporates by reference the '249 patent (which includes the "essential element" disavowal). The incorporated patents are "effectively part of the host [patents] as if [they] were explicitly contained
Of course, "incorporation by reference does not convert the invention of the incorporated patent into the invention of the host patent." Modine Mfg. Co. v. U.S. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 75 F.3d 1545, 1553 (Fed.Cir.1996). And it is certainly possible that a clear and unmistakable disavowal in an incorporated patent is no longer so when placed in the context of the disclosure of the host patent. This, however, is not that case. Although the '444 patent mentions that, "[a]s used generally therein," a conductive pathway could include electrode pairings that are "electrically null, electrically complementary, electrically differential, or electrically opposite," '444 patent col. 4 l. 66 — col. 5 l. 11, this teaching is not sufficient to blur the clear disavowals. The possibility that conductive pathways may include these structures is not inconsistent with the patents' statements that, of all the conceivable configurations, the sandwich configuration is a "feature[] universal" and an "essential element" of the inventions of the asserted patents. These disavowals therefore limit the scope of the claims of the '444 and '500 patents. We agree with the ITC that, in light of the clear disavowals, the claims at issue are limited to "a common conductive pathway electrode positioned between paired electromagnetically opposite conductors." Because X2Y conceded noninfringement based on this construction, we need not reach any other issues.
We affirm, the ITC's determination of no violation of 19 U.S.C. § 1337.
REYNA, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I join the court's opinion in its entirety. I write separately to address an error in the claim construction approach adopted by the ALJ and the Commission. The error, while significant, did not affect the result affirmed by this court.
Specifically, the ALJ and the Commission assumed a specific priority date that X2Y asserted as a defense to an invalidity challenge. The ALJ and the Commission then determined that the scope of the asserted claims was limited by "the invention" disclosed in earlier patents in the priority chain. This was error because the asserted claims derive from multiple continuation-in-part applications, and because the ALJ and the Commission failed to objectively construe the asserted claims before deciding whether the claims were entitled to priority.
The asserted patents belong to an extensive family claiming priority to the '350
The asserted patents incorporate by reference the disclosures of the '350 and '249 patents ("the earlier patents") to varying degrees. The '500 patent incorporates by reference the '350 patent and shares a specification with the '249 patent. The '444 patent incorporates by reference the earlier patents but has a different specification. The '241 patent also has a different specification, and does not incorporate by reference either of the earlier patents.
Respondents argued below that X2Y's claims should be limited by the disclosures in the earlier patents. The ALJ agreed with Respondents:
The ALJ therefore construed the "electrode" terms in view of certain disclaimers of scope in the earlier patents.
The Commission agreed with the ALJ's claim construction approach, explaining that statements of disavowal in the earlier patents should apply to the asserted claims because X2Y took the position that the claims "trace their priority through many generations of applications (including the '249 patent) all the way to the '350 patent."
On this basis, the Commission affirmed the ALJ's claim construction of the "electrode" terms.
The claim construction approach affirmed by the Commission is erroneous for three reasons. First, it is well settled that a written description analysis depends on a proper claim construction because, among other reasons, a claim is entitled to the priority date of an earlier application only if the earlier specification provides sufficient written support for the full scope of the claim.
Second, it is improper to "hold" the patentee to a priority date that it asserted as a defense to an invalidity challenge without first construing the claims and resolving invalidity issues. To be clear, invalidity considerations may inform claim construction in limited circumstances, but they cannot dictate the process. In this case, all the invalidity defenses raised by Respondents (anticipation, obviousness, indefiniteness, lack of written description and improper inventorship) required that the claims be construed first. X2Y did not bear an initial burden of proving non-invalidity — including that the patent antedates alleged prior art — because all patents are presumed valid.
And third, it was erroneous to treat X2Y's attempt to overcome allegedly invalidating prior art through a priority claim as an attempt by X2Y to "recast" its patents.
In other words, the invention claimed in a continuation-in-part application does not have to be limited to the invention disclosed in a priority patent. To the extent that a continuation-in-part application claims new matter, entitlement to priority is decided on a claim-by-claim basis, and various claims may be entitled to different priority dates.
Although the path followed by the ALJ and the Commission was error, the construction they reached was correct because the disclaimer statements that informed the ALJ and the Commission's construction were incorporated explicitly or by reference in some of the asserted patents, and X2Y agreed to treat all "electrode" terms consistently across the asserted patents. Under the proper claim construction analysis, as outlined by this court's opinion, the relevant intrinsic record contains sufficient clear and unmistakable disavowal of claim scope to support the construction adopted by the ALJ and the Commission.