JAMES DONATO, District Judge.
In this patent infringement case, Altera seeks a declaration that it does not infringe certain PACT patents and that the patents in dispute are invalid. Under the Court's November 5, 2015 Case Management and Scheduling Order, both the patentee (PACT) and the accused infringer (Altera) are required to narrow the number of asserted claims and invalidity theories, respectively. See Case Management and Scheduling Order ¶ 4. PACT claims that Altera has not complied with the Court's limits, and seeks an order compelling Altera to drop some of its currently-asserted invalidity theories.
The Court's Case Management and Scheduling Order calls for invalidity theories to be narrowed in two rounds. In the first round, Altera was to "limit the number of asserted prior art references and obviousness combinations per patent to thirty or less, and the total number of asserted prior art references and obviousness combinations to ninety or less." Case Management and Scheduling Order ¶ 4b. In a second round, set for forty-two days after the claim construction order issues, Altera is required to limit the number of asserted prior art references and obviousness combinations again — this time to fifteen or fewer per patent, and totaling no more than forty-five overall. See id. ¶ 4d. The Court stated that these limits could be modified for good cause shown. See id. ¶ 4e.
Since January 12, 2015 — the date on which Altera's initial election of its invalidity theories was due — the parties have been engaged in back-and-forth on the definition of an "obviousness combination." They have reached an impasse and now ask the Court for guidance.
The difference in the parties' positions can best be illustrated with an example. Altera currently proposes this election of prior art and obviousness combinations for U.S. Patent No. 6,119,181:
See Altera's Corrected Amended Preliminary Election of Asserted Prior Art at 1-2, Dkt. No. 163-6. By Altera's count, this chart lists twenty-two references and eight obviousness combinations, for a total of thirty. PACT, on the other hand, would count 1,736 — in other words, every possible sub-combination in each of Altera's proposed combinations.
Although Altera argues that the eight "combinations" it proposes here are the sets of references it would present to a jury if trial were held today, it is hard to imagine that Altera would, in fact, ask a jury to invalidate a patent claim based on some unspecified combination of one primary reference and one or more secondary references. Perhaps recognizing the dubiousness of this claim, Altera also contends that PACT actually knows, based on Altera's invalidity contentions, that certain sub-combinations will not actually be presented as grounds for invalidating a claim as obvious. If so, Altera should list the sub-combinations that it will present in its election of invalidity theories. As it stands, it is impossible to tell from Altera's election alone how many sub-combinations there are that Altera believes invalidate the asserted claims.
Altera does make a colorable point that the number of prior art references and obviousness combinations is driven by the number of claim elements at issue, which bears no necessary relationship with the number of asserted claims and the number of asserted patents. It may therefore be unfair, under some circumstances, to impose per-patent limits on the number of prior art references and obviousness combinations. Take the following stylized example, in which the patentee asserts two claims: claim 1 and claim 2, which depends from claim 1.
A factual predicate to the legal determination of obviousness is the differences, if any, between the prior art and the claimed invention. See Graham v. John Deere Co. of Kansas City, 383 U.S. 1, 17 (1966). A factfinder making this determination for claim 2 would compare prior art reference A to elements [1] and [2]; reference B to element [3], reference C to element [4], and reference D to claim [5]. Having done this, the factfinder would face no additional burden evaluating claim 1, since it has already made the necessary comparisons with respect to claim 2. Arguably, the party asserting invalidity should not have the theories in claim 1 count against its limit.
The problem with counting prior art references on a per-claim or per-patent basis, as opposed to a per-element basis, becomes more acute when multiple references are asserted against a given element. Consider the following example:
Here, the burden on the factfinder has not increased much: compared to Table 2, there are only three additional comparisons that need to be made (i.e., [3] against Ref. E, [4] against Ref. F, and [5] against Ref. G). But measured on a per-claim basis, the number of combinations asserted against claim 2 has grown from one to eight (A+B+C+D, A+B+C+G, A+B+F+D, A+B+F+G, A+E+C+D, A+E+C+G, A+E+F+D, A+E+F+G).
As far as the Court is aware, no other court has ordered narrowing of prior art references on a per-limitation basis, likely because that would lead to interminable disputes over the definition of a claim limitation. Instead, both the Federal Circuit Advisory Council's Model Order Limiting Excess Patent Claims and Prior Art and the Eastern District of Texas's Model Order Focusing Patent Claims and Prior Art to Reduce Costs call for limitations on prior art on a per-patent basis. See Federal Circuit Model Order ¶¶ 2-3, available at http://patentlyo.com/media/docs/2013/07/model-order-excess-claims.pdf (accessed Jun. 19, 2015);
The Court gives the parties the following guidance regarding how prior art references and obviousness combinations should be counted:
If Altera has a good-faith basis for arguing that these limits are unduly restrictive, it may move to increase them. The Court emphasizes that that request must be supported by good-faith facts set forth in a declaration. The request should be made in the form of a letter brief not to exceed three pages in addition to the declaration. It should include examples of other courts that have allowed similar increases. For example, although Altera claims that it would be prejudiced by the requirement that it select no more than 15 prior art references and combinations per patent and no more than 45 overall prior to expert reports, the Eastern District of Texas's model order requires selecting, by the opening expert reports deadline, 6 prior art references per patent and no more than 20 overall, with each obviousness combination counting as a separate reference. See E.D. Tex. Model Order ¶ 3. The Court notes that its limits on prior art references are more generous than either the Federal Circuit Advisory Council's or the Eastern District of Texas's model orders, although the Eastern District of Texas's model order does not impose any limitations on obviousness combinations in the initial election of asserted prior art. See id.
Altera is directed to file an amended election of prior art that complies with this order by July 3, 2015. If it seeks to modify the limits set by the Court's orders for good cause, it should move well in advance of the July 3 deadline.