MITCHELL S. GOLDBERG, District Judge.
This is a patent infringement action instituted by Plaintiff, MoneyCat Ltd, against Defendant, PayPal, Inc. MoneyCat generally alleges that PayPal's electronic payment processing services and related products infringe three of MoneyCat's patents. Discovery is currently underway as directed by a Scheduling Order entered on November 25, 2013.
PayPal has moved to transfer this case to the Northern District of California, arguing that litigation there would be far more convenient given the scope of the allegations and the amount of evidence and witnesses that PayPal will be required to produce. Although transfer of this case could further delay its resolution, I conclude that convenience and the interests of justice dictate that this case should proceed in the Northern District of California. I will therefore grant PayPal's motion.
MoneyCat is an Israeli corporation without a business presence in the United States. (Def. Br. Ex. D, at 21.) It does, however, own three patents entitled "Electronic Currency, Electronic Wallet Therefor and Electronic Payment Systems Employing Them." (Compl. ¶¶ 9-18.) The named inventor on these patents, Kfir Luzzatto, is a resident of Israel, as is his wife Esther, who provided input during the invention process and is a likely witness in this case. (Def. Br. Ex. D, at 10; Def. Br. Ex. F, at 2-3.) The thrust of this lawsuit is that the bulk of PayPal's electronic payment and credit systems infringe upon these three MoneyCat patents. (Compl. ¶¶ 26-65.) The Complaint was filed on July 30, 2013, in the District of Delaware.
PayPal is incorporated in Delaware, but maintains its principal place of business in San Jose, California. (Compl. 3.) PayPal has "approximately 2700 permanent employees in California," makes the majority of its management and development decisions in or near its San Jose office, and maintains the bulk of its business records there. (Dwight Decl. ¶¶ 4, 6, 8.) The Northern District of California, where PayPal proposes to transfer this case, has a courthouse in San Jose. In contrast, PayPal has no offices or employees in Delaware, although its services are undoubtedly used by Delaware residents. (Dwight Decl. ¶ 10.) "Bill Me Later," one of the accused services, was acquired by PayPal in 2008, and is headquartered in Maryland. (Dwight Decl. ¶ 11.) Two other accused infringers, Braintree and Venmo, were acquired by PayPal even more recently, and have offices on both coasts. (Pl. Br. Ex. B-C.)
This motion is governed by 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), which provides that:
The threshold inquiry is whether the proposed transferee district is one in which the case could have been brought originally.
Once the threshold requirement of a proper transferee venue is met, the question is whether the factors identified in 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) weigh "strongly" in favor of transfer.
I am guided here by the Supreme Court's articulation of the statute's core purpose:
To assist courts undertaking the transfer analysis, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit elaborated on the text of section 1404(a).
(3) the relative administrative difficulty in the two fora resulting from court congestion; (4) the local interest in deciding local controversies at home; (5) the public policies of the fora; (6) the familiarity of the trial judge with the applicable state law in diversity cases.
Prior to examining the above factors, I will first consider MoneyCat's argument that PayPal's motion, filed February 3, 2014, is untimely. MoneyCat first notes that my Policies and Procedures encourage the parties to make motions for a transfer prior to the Rule 16 scheduling conference, which occurred in this case over two months prior to PayPal filing its motion to transfer.
PayPal counters that it could not have known the scope of this lawsuit (and hence the relevant witnesses, amount of documents, etc.), until December 20, 2013, when MoneyCat served its list of accused products and services, which "asserted infringement against a total of 19 PayPal services by name," in addition to the "Venmo/Braintree services." (Def. Br. 1; Def. Br. Ex. A, at 2-3.) MoneyCat responds that the Complaint articulated enough of PayPal's services, such that PayPal should have been on notice of the scope of the lawsuit long before December 2013. (
Review of MoneyCat's Complaint reflects general allegations that PayPal's "electronic payment systems, products and services" infringe the three patents-in-suit, but does not name any specific PayPal services in the detail provided by the December 20th list. As PayPal argues, knowledge of the "specific functionalities" being challenged was potentially necessary to help it determine which witnesses it would need to make available and the evidence it would likely be expected to produce.
At the same time, the parties have a significant litigation history. MoneyCat first sued PayPal for infringement in 2010, before voluntarily dismissing the Complaint. And PayPal admitted in its Answer that it instigated several ex parte reexaminations of the patents-in-suit. (Ans. ¶¶ 32, 46, 60.) It thus seems likely that PayPal was aware of MoneyCat's position that the patents at issue cover substantial portions of PayPal's business.
As my procedures suggest, motions to transfer ought to be made as early in the proceedings as practicable. It is certainly preferable that "the court which ultimately decides the merits of the action should also decide the various questions which arise during the pendency of the suit instead of considering it in two courts."
The analysis of a motion to transfer calls for an "individualized, case-by-case consideration of convenience and fairness."
The plaintiff's forum choice is entitled to considerable—even "paramount"—deference.
MoneyCat is an Israeli company that does no business in the United States. (Def. Br. Ex. D, at 21.) It has no apparent ties to Delaware, and thus its choice of Delaware as a venue is not entitled to significant deference unless it can make a strong showing that Delaware is more convenient than California. MoneyCat argues that Delaware is more convenient because the East Coast is the nearest forum to Israel that it could have chosen.
PayPal would prefer to litigate in the Northern District of California because it is headquartered there, maintains the bulk of its records there, and has a number of potential employee-witnesses located there. These are legitimate reasons to favor an alternate forum, but because the reasons will generally be considered under other factors, I do not give them significant weight here, to avoid double-counting. This factor therefore weighs in favor of transfer, but only slightly.
MoneyCat notes that PayPal's allegedly infringing services are offered and used throughout the United States, and thus its claims for infringement cannot be said to have arisen in any particular district. The cases it cites from this court support that position.
On the other hand, PayPal points to other Delaware district court cases observing that infringement actions also can be said to arise "where the allegedly infringing products were designed and manufactured."
Here, I agree with the court's view in
I have already considered to some extent the additional inconvenience to MoneyCat that might accrue from having to litigate in the Northern District of California rather than its preferred venue. MoneyCat also stresses that "[c]omparing the financial condition of MoneyCat and Paypal . . . weighs against transfer," the suggestion being that MoneyCat will be financially burdened by being required to litigate in California. But there is nothing in the record to suggest that this is true. In fact, MoneyCat's outside counsel has an office in San Diego, which will surely lessen the burden of having to litigate in California, and MoneyCat is currently bearing the expense of local counsel in Delaware, which would be avoided if the case is tried in California. Overall, there is no reason to think that litigating in California will be significantly more expensive for MoneyCat, especially since most of the witnesses and evidence exist in either California or Israel, and none exists in Delaware.
Under this factor it is also appropriate to consider MoneyCat's argument that PayPal's incorporation in Delaware weighs in favor of denying the transfer motion. It appears that most courts who give incorporation significant weight have done so by recognizing that a plaintiff's state of incorporation is part of its "home turf," a finding that bolsters the weight given to the plaintiff's choice of forum.
This factor considers the convenience of witnesses and the extent to which the transferor court has the ability to compel the attendance of uncooperative witnesses. Generally speaking, this factor plays a limited role in this case, because most of the witnesses are parties or employees of one of the parties. (See, e.g., Def. Reply, Ex. D (PayPal Supplemental Initial Disclosures) (naming 15 persons with relevant information, 10 of which are PayPal employees).) A party is "obligated to procure the attendance of its own employees," regardless of where the trial is ultimately held. Affymetrix, 28 F. Supp. 2d at 203. (Thus, the location of employee-witnesses should generally be analyzed as affecting that convenience of the parties, not the witnesses.) PayPal does point out, however, that one potential witness identified by MoneyCat is an employee of a company called Intellectual Ventures, which is apparently located within the subpoena power of the Northern District of California. Further, PayPal suggests that former employees (or persons who become former employees before this case is tried), whose attendance it could no longer procure, may have relevant information, and are likely to be located in California. This is a valid concern, but it does not appear that PayPal has identified any such persons at this stage. Accordingly, although this factor weighs slightly in favor of transfer, I give it little weight.
I have already discussed the fact that PayPal is likely to be the party producing the bulk of documents and records in this case, and that it would be more convenient for it to litigate this case near its headquarters than on the East Coast. Efficiency favors transferring a case to the location where the vast majority of relevant records are to be found. Genentech, 566 F.3d at 1345. Although MoneyCat notes that advances in technology have reduced the burden of moving physical documents from place to place, it would be "improper to ignore [this factor] entirely." Link A Media, 662 F.3d at 1224. This factor weighs in favor of transfer.
In contrast to the private interest factors, the public interest factors concern matters "affecting the convenience of the forum," rather than the parties. Windt, 529 F.3d at 189.
Neither party contends that a judgment in this district would be any harder or easier to enforce than a judgment in the Northern District of California. This factor is neutral.
This factor directs the court to consider practical concerns related to a trial in both the transferee and transferor courts. I have already noted that the bulk of the witnesses in this matter will likely come from PayPal. It follows that a trial nearer to PayPal's headquarters is likely to present fewer complications than one across the country. Witnesses who live within a short distance of the courthouse are likely to be more flexible as to when they are able to attend trial and testify, making the management of the proofs simpler. And, as PayPal notes, the Protective Order in this case requires PayPal to maintain a stand-alone computer with its source code within 10 miles of the courthouse for the duration of trial. Although this is likely not a great expense, the transport across the county of the secure computer containing the source code would likely be simplified if trial were to take place in California. Finally, transferring this case would relieve both parties of the expense of local counsel. Affymetrix, 28 F. Supp. 2d at 205-06.
Against these factors, MoneyCat does no more than repeat its argument that it makes no sense to transfer this case when discovery is "well under way in a proper forum." There is no reason why the discovery process cannot continue pending the transfer and as noted previously under my scheduling order, discovery will not conclude until September 2014
As both parties agree, analysis of this factor reveals no relevant difference between this district and the Northern District of California. This factor is therefore neutral.
PayPal argues that California has a greater local interest in this case than Delaware because PayPal's products and services were developed primarily in California, and because a patent infringement suit calls into question the "work and reputation of several individuals" associated with PayPal who live and work in that district. In re Hoffman-La Roche, Inc., 587 F.3d 1333, 1336 (Fed. Cir. 2009). MoneyCat, meanwhile, notes that the patent laws implicate interests that are national, not local, and that several courts in this district have declined to give any weight to this factor in a patent infringement dispute.
MoneyCat has the better of this argument. Although it is perhaps not inconceivable that one district could have a greater interest in a patent infringement controversy than another (say, in the context of truly regional businesses), that is clearly not the case here. PayPal is a national name with users all across the United States. A finding of infringement could potentially affect PayPal's operations everywhere, not just in California. I therefore conclude that California does not have any unique local interest in this case.
MoneyCat argues that this factor actually weighs against transfer because, in seeking transfer to the Northern District of California, "[w]hat PayPal alleges is `local interest' is actually `local bias.'" Although MoneyCat does not fully develop this argument, the idea seems to be that PayPal is likely to find a more favorable jury pool in a district where it employs a substantial number of people—approximately 2,700 in California, and the majority in the Northern District of California—and has significant ties to the community. (Dwight Decl. ¶ 4.) This argument is somewhat speculative, but even if its premise were true, MoneyCat has not explained why voir dire will not be sufficient to protect it from jury bias. I consider this factor to be neutral.
Neither party suggests that there are any local policies that favor one forum over the other in this case, and I therefore consider this factor to be neutral.
Of the private interest factors, two weigh in favor of transfer (convenience of the parties, and the location of books and records), one weighs against transfer (MoneyCat's forum preference), and three weigh only slightly in favor of transfer (PayPal's forum preference, where the claim arose, and the convenience and availability of witnesses). Of the public interest factors that apply, one weighs in favor of transfer (practical considerations), and four are neutral. Balancing these factors, I conclude that PayPal has met its burden to justify transferring this action to the Northern District of California.
An appropriate order follows.