TED STEWART, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment of Patent Infringement and Motion to Strike Declarations of Attorney Coffey and Attorney Sarney. The Court will grant in part and deny in part Plaintiff's Motion for Summary Judgment and deny Plaintiff's Motion to Strike for the reasons set forth below.
Plaintiff Aqua Shield alleges that, through their combined actions, Inter Pool Cover Team, Alukov HZ spol Sro., Alukov, spol Sro., and Pool & Spa Enclosures, LLC (collectively "IPC") infringed on Plaintiff's patent, U.S. Patent No. 6,637,160 (the "'160 Patent"). Defendants are a pan-European association of manufacturers and traders who develop, produce, and deal in swimming pool enclosures.
Aqua Shield has filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on its infringement claim. Aqua Shield has also filed a motion asking the Court to strike the affidavits that IPC has attached it its opposition memorandum.
Summary judgment is proper if the moving party can demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact and it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
"Literal infringement of a claim exists when every limitation recited in the claim is found in the accused device, i.e., when the properly construed claim reads on the accused device exactly."
Aqua Shield alleges that (1) IPC has installed a pool cover in Utah that infringes the '160 Patent ("the Utah Installation") and (2) IPC offers for sale other pool covers that infringe '160 Patent.
Though IPC disputes all but five of Aqua Shields statements of fact "inasmuch as [they] misstate[] facts in the record," only two disputes are actually addressed in IPC's argument: (1) whether the Utah Installation contains an "anchor plate" as required by Claim 10; and (2) whether the Utah Installation contains a hooks-and-straps system as required by Claim 15. Though IPC's analysis of this issues is offered merely as "an example" of the dischord between the Utah Installation and Patent '160, IPC cannot expect the Court to simply use its imagination to divine other specific discrepancies. Accordingly, the Court must proceed as though the only factual disputes in this matter
IPC argues that the Utah Installation does not infringe Claim 10 because the photographs offered by Plaintiff do not show that the accused product has an anchor plate as required by that Claim. Plaintiff has provided the sworn statement of Bob Brooks, inventor of the '160 Patent, which affirms that the accused product has an anchor plate: "The U-shaped frame of the Utah Installation also includes an anchor plate for contacting the rails which was verifiable by the naked eye during inspection but were [sic] unable to take a picture of due to access restriction."
IPC responds to Mr. Brooks's declaration by stressing that the photograph does not verify Mr. Brooks's claim and thus there is a material issue of disputed fact as to whether an anchor plate was a part of the accused product. This argument confuses the respective burdens of parties to a summary judgment motion. As movant, Aqua Shield bears the burden of production. The extent of this burden is measured in light of whether the movant will ultimately bear the burden of persuasion on an issue at trial.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 50 allows the Court to direct a verdict "if a party has been fully heard on an issue during a jury trial and the court finds that a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the party on that issue."
Here, Aqua Shield has supported its Motion with the affidavit of Mr. Brooks.
IPC cannot meet its burden by simply claiming, as they do, that Aqua Shield has not sufficiently proved the existence of the plate. Rather, it was incumbent on IPC to point the Court to some evidence showing that the plate was not a part of the Utah Installation. By failing to do so, IPC has failed to overcome summary judgment on this issue.
IPC also argues that the Utah Installation does not violate Claim 15 of the '160 Patent because that Claim requires a product to have hooks and straps for securing panels and the Utah Installation has none. In his sworn affidavit, Mr. Brooks stated that "[h]ooks and straps securing the arcuate panels to ground were not detected at the Utah Installation
Because Aqua Shield has not offered any evidence that the Utah Installation had or could have a hooks-and-straps system, the question of whether Claim 15 allows the system to be removable is irrelevant. Mr. Brooks has merely noted (1) that the hooks-and-straps system was not visible on the Utah Installation; (2) that the system was meant only for use during high winds; and (3) that the system is present on the other models IPC offers for sale. The contention that the hooks and straps are only meant for periods of high winds is irrelevant without a further showing that the Utah Installation included such removable hooks and straps. Nor does the contention that the system is present on other models have any bearing on the Utah Installation. In short, Aqua Shield has not met its burden of production with respect to the inclusion of a hooks-and-straps system in the Utah Installation, whether removable or fixed. Accordingly, the Court will not grant summary judgment to Aqua Shield on infringement of Claim 15 by the Utah Installation.
In his affidavit, Mr. Brooks states that "IPC's other models including, but not limited to, the Universe, Laguna, Tropea, Combi, Style, Veranda, Spa and Orient models ... based upon my review of IPC's product information ... have the same structural and functional features as the Utah Installation."
IPC has failed to meet its burden. IPC's sole contradictory statement is that "some of IPC's pool enclosures do not include `a pair of end panels,' some do not include `rectangular panels,' and some do not include `horizontal frame members.'"
In addition to its factual arguments, IPC argues that Aqua Shield is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law on infringement of the '160 Patent because (1) the patent is anticipated by two foreign patents and (2) "IPC's own engineering schematics anticipate[] the '160 Patent claims."
In support of its anticipation argument, IPC references a French and an Australian patent, both of which were in existence before the '160 Patent. The entirety of IPC's anticipation argument is that both patents show "arc shaped telescoping roofing elements of a pool enclosure installed on removable rails."
A showing that a challenged patent shares an element with a prior patent is not enough — the presence of each element of a claim must be shown in the prior art. Rather than comparing the foreign patents with the '160 Patent element-by-element, IPC has merely provided blanket citations to the patents as a whole. The Court will not sift through the evidence to make arguments on IPC's behalf. Accordingly, the Court will reject IPC's anticipation argument based on the foreign patents.
IPC also argues that its own schematics anticipate the '160 Patent because the schematics reveal that IPC "offered and used the plurality of horizontal rails now accused of infringement in 2000 — before Mr. Brooks filed for the '160 Patent."
Nor is IPC's argument that it has sold five of its pool cover models in the United States prior to the '160 Patent availing. IPC reasons that, because Aqua Shield accuses these models of infringing the 160 Patent, and because these models were sold in the U.S. before the patent was granted, the models prove that the '160 Patent was anticipated and is thus invalid. As proof, IPC offers only the blurry screenshots referenced above. The screenshots do not indicate when the products contained thereon were available for sale in the United States. Because IPC offers no more, the Court must reject IPC's argument as unsupported without considering its merits.
Aqua Shield asks the Court to strike the affidavits attached to IPC's opposition memorandum. The affidavits seek to authenticate other exhibits attached by IPC. As discussed above, the Court finds that even assuming the exhibits are authenticated, they are either unavailing or unnecessary. With or without the exhibits, IPC has not met its burden for successfully contesting any part of the summary judgment motion for which there was sufficient factual support offered by Aqua Shield. In the same vein, Aqua Shield has not met its burden for the Utah Installation as to Claim 15, and thus IPC's response, including exhibits, is irrelevant. Accordingly, the Court will deny the Motion to Strike as moot.
In light of the foregoing, the Court will grant summary judgment on Aqua Shield's claim that the Utah Installation infringes on Claims 1-14 and Claim 16 of the '160 Patent, but deny it as to Claim 15. The Court will also grant summary judgment on Aqua Shield's claim that IPC's other models infringe the '160 Patent. Finally, the Court will deny Aqua Shield's motion to strike. It is therefore
ORDERED that Aqua Shield's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Docket No. 59) is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. It is further
ORDERED that Aqua Shield's Motion to Strike Declarations of Attorney Coffey and Attorney Sarney (Docket No. 70) is DENIED as moot.