WILLIAM S. DUFFEY, Jr., District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Defendants SunTrust Banks Inc.'s and SunTrust Bank's ("the SunTrust Defendants") Motion to Sever, or, in the alternative, Stay [47] the claims against them in
On May 19, 2014, Plaintiff Capital Security Systems Inc. ("Plaintiff") filed a patent infringement action, in this Court, against NCR Corporation ("NCR") and its customers, the SunTrust Defendants. Defendant NCR is a computer hardware, software and electronics company, based in Duluth, Georgia, that provides businesses with point-of-sale terminals, automated teller machines ("ATM"), check processing systems and barcode scanners. NCR produces ATMs that incorporate Scalable Deposit Module ("SDM") technology, which allows customers of a bank to deposit cash into their accounts without an envelope. In July 2012, the SunTrust Defendants entered into an exclusive contract to purchase more than twelve hundred (1200) ATMs from NCR. Plaintiff, a company based in San Diego, California, alleges that it owns Patents Nos. 5,897,625 ("the '625 Patent"), 7,653,600 ("the '600 Patent"), 7,991,696 ("the '696 Patent"), and 8,121,948 ("the '948 Patent"). These four Patents purport to claim a method or apparatus for depositing checks into an ATM machine without the need of an envelope.
Plaintiff alleges that NCR infringed the '600, '625 and '948 Patents by manufacturing ATMs that incorporated SDM technology, and that the SunTrust Defendants infringed the Patents by providing their customers with ATMs supplied by NCR. Plaintiff contends that the '696 Patent is infringed directly by the SunTrust Defendants but not NCR.
On November 12, 2014, the SunTrust Defendants invoked the customer suit exception in moving to sever or, in the alternative, stay Plaintiff's patent infringement claims against them. The SunTrust Defendants argue that the case against NCR should proceed first because it is the party that manufactured and sold the ATMs, and the SunTrust Defendants were post-manufacture purchasers of the ATMs from NCR.
On December 1, 2014, Plaintiff responded to the SunTrust Defendants' Motion to Sever or Stay Plaintiff's claims. Plaintiff does not oppose staying the claims against the SunTrust Defendants, and argues that NCR's counterclaim based on the '696 Patent against Plaintiff should also be stayed.
On March 21, 2014, and April 23, 2014, Plaintiff filed patent infringement actions against ABNB and Capital One respectively, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia ("District Court for the EDVA"). ABNB and Capital One are financial institutions that, like the SunTrust Defendants, purchased ATMs from NCR.
On October 20, 2014, the District Court for the EDVA found that the customer suit exception applied, and transferred the customer suits in
On November 6, 2014, ABNB and Capital One moved to stay Plaintiff's customer suits now pending in this Court on the ground that the case against NCR should proceed first because it manufactured and sold the ATMs, and ABNB and Capital One are merely customers that purchased the ATMs from NCR. Plaintiff does not oppose staying its claims against ABNB and Capital One.
The Court has the inherent power to manage its docket and stay proceedings, and the decision whether to stay a case rests "within the sound discretion of the [C]ourt."
In patent cases, there is a "customer suit" exception that gives priority to actions against a manufacturer over patent actions against customers of the manufacturer. This exception "exists to avoid, if possible, imposing the burdens of trial on the customer, for it is the manufacturer who is generally the `true defendant' in the dispute."
In
The Court concludes that Plaintiff's actions against ABNB and Capital One, and claims against the SunTrust Defendants, are required to be stayed pending the resolution of the dispute between Plaintiff and NCR.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons,