TED STEWART, District Court.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff Won Door Corporation's ("Won Door") Motion for a Preliminary Injunction. For the reasons set forth below, the Court will grant Plaintiff's Motion.
Plaintiff manufactures movable partitions designed to extend and retract across rooms, and related components used to install such partitions. Defendant Cornell
Since 2008, Plaintiff and Defendant have directly competed in a two-player market manufacturing and installing accordion-style partitions in church buildings for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints ("LDS Church"). On July 28, 2009, Plaintiff filed U.S. Patent Application 12/510,382, which was subsequently published on February 3, 2011, as US2011/0024061 ("the '061 Publication"). Plaintiff's application described a header assembly that suspends the partition and comprises a single channel in which the partition slides to extend or retract. On February 9, 2012, one of Plaintiff's employees obtained a sample of a one-track assembly being used by Defendant in installations and notified Plaintiff's Installation Manager.
In May 2012, Plaintiff contacted Defendant asserting that Defendant's one-track assembly appeared to fall within the scope of the '061 Publication and that Plaintiff had a right to pursue a legal remedy once the patent issued. On November 27, 2012, Plaintiff's application issued as U.S. Patent 8,316,914 ("the '914 Patent"). On May 1, 2013, another of Plaintiff's employees observed a partition installed by Defendant that used the one-track assembly. On May 10, 2013, Plaintiff filed suit against Defendant alleging patent infringement. On June 4, 2013, Plaintiff moved for a preliminary injunction to enjoin Defendant, from "making, using, selling, or offering to sell movable partitions header assemblies, and overhead tracks" that infringe the '914 Patent.
"It is well established that a preliminary injunction is an extraordinary remedy reserved only for those cases where it is clearly warranted."
For patent infringement claims, the first factor of the preliminary injunction test involves two prongs:
"A patent holder seeking a preliminary injunction bears the ultimate burden of establishing a likelihood of success on the
Plaintiff provided the Court with an element-by-element analysis of Defendant's track, demonstrating how Defendant's track meets each limitation of claim 1 and claim 7 of the '914 Patent. Defendant has not challenged Plaintiff's infringement analysis. Therefore, for purposes of this Motion, the Court finds that Plaintiff is likely to prove that Defendant's overhead track infringes claim 1 and claim 7 of the '914 Patent.
Patents enjoy a statutory presumption of validity.
Defendant argues that each element of claims 1 and 7 of the '914 Patent were taught by prior art, and that the '914 Patent is therefore invalid for obviousness. Plaintiff argues that Defendant has failed to explain why a person of ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to combine the elements in the cited prior art to create the '914 Patent. Plaintiff also argues that objective indicators of nonobviousness disprove Defendant's assertion that the '914 Patent is invalid for obviousness.
35 U.S.C. § 103 provides that
"[A] patent composed of several elements is not proved obvious by demonstrating that each of its elements was, independently, known in the art."
Plaintiff also argues that objective indicators of nonobviousness demonstrate that Defendant's invalidity argument lacks substantial merit. "Objective evidence of nonobviousness is an important component of the obviousness inquiry because `evidence of secondary considerations may often be the most probative and cogent evidence in the record. It may often establish that an invention appearing to have been obvious in light of the prior art was not.'"
First, the unitized track described in the '914 Patent has had commercial success. "Since 2010, [the unitized track] has generated over $50 million in product sales and project specifications for projects incorporating the unitized track and header assembly of the '914 Patent."
Second, Defendant copied Plaintiff's innovation. "Not every competing product that arguably falls within the scope of a patent is evidence of copying. Otherwise every infringement suit would automatically confirm the nonobviousness of the patent."
Third, Plaintiff's track design met a long felt need in the industry. "The length of the intervening time between the publication dates of the prior art and the claimed invention" is an objective indicator of an innovation having met a long felt need in the industry.
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds that Plaintiff will likely prove infringement, and will likely withstand Defendant's challenges to the validity and enforceability of the '914 Patent.
The Federal Circuit has recognized that "the existence of a two-player market may well serve as a substantial ground for granting an injunction — e.g., because it creates an inference that an infringing sale amounts to a lost sale for the patentee...."
As discussed above, both parties agree that the only buyer in the relevant market — the LDS Church — requires use of the overhead track design encompassed by the '914 Patent in its bid specifications. Therefore, to participate in the market, Defendant must use Plaintiff's design. This requires Plaintiff to compete against its own invention and strips Plaintiff of its right to exclusivity of its innovation.
Defendant argues that Plaintiff delayed in bringing its Motion and that such delay is evidence of a lack of urgency and a lack of irreparable harm. "Delay is a factor in evaluating irreparable harm."
Plaintiff first became aware that Defendant was developing or installing its own unitized track in February 2012, when Plaintiff obtained a sample of Defendant's one-piece track assembly. In May 2012, Plaintiff's attorney sent a notice letter to Defendant, advising that Defendant's product appeared to fall within the scope of the '061 Publication. The '914 Patent issued six months later, on November 27, 2012. Plaintiff first received confirmation that Defendant was still installing the unitized track on May 1, 2013, when Plaintiff obtained photos of a partition system that was recently installed in San Tan Valley, Arizona. Plaintiff filed its Complaint shortly thereafter, on May 10, 2013, and filed its Motion for Preliminary Injunction on June 4, 2013. As such, one month passed between Plaintiff discovering what it believed to be an infringing installation and its request for injunctive relief. The Court finds that this is not the type of delay that militates against a finding of irreparable harm.
Based on the foregoing, the Court finds that Plaintiff will suffer irreparable harm if an injunction is not granted.
Defendant argues that Plaintiff should be held to a heightened standard because granting the preliminary injunction
"[T]he status quo is `the last uncontested status between the parties which preceded the controversy until the outcome of the final hearing.'"
The Court finds that the last uncontested status between the parties precedes Defendant's unauthorized use of the unitized track encompassed by Plaintiff's '914 Patent. The evidence before the Court is that Plaintiff contested Defendant's use of the unitized track as soon as Plaintiff became aware of it, even if Plaintiff did not file a complaint at that time. Therefore, a preliminary injunction would not alter the status quo between the parties. Further, the Court finds that the harm Plaintiff will suffer if the injunction is not issued outweighs any harm Defendant may suffer.
"A preliminary injunction that enforces a valid patent against an infringer does no more than further public policy inherent in the patent laws designed to encourage useful inventions by rewarding the inventor with a limited period of market exclusivity."
It is therefore
ORDERED that Plaintiff's Motion for Preliminary Injunction (Docket No. 7) is GRANTED as follows:
Defendant, its officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys, parents, subsidiaries and other related companies, and all persons acting in concert with Defendant are immediately enjoined:
1. From making, using, selling or offering for sale, any product incorporating the invention claimed in the '914 Patent, or any colorable imitation thereof, pending entry of final judgment in this action; and
2. From further acts of infringement of the '914 Patent.