Milton I. Shadur, Senior United States District Judge.
This memorandum opinion and order begins with a mea culpa on the part of this Court. Because of the overwhelming paper blizzard
But a block of time has opened up on the calendar as the result of a long-scheduled criminal trial having unexpectedly eventuated in a change of plea. Hence this Court has sought to take advantage of that hiatus to address the three-headed motion. And as will be seen, the presentation (though not the thought process involved) can be made in comparatively short compass.
Celsis, having already lost on the issue both before this Court (see its March 24, 2011 memorandum opinion and order, Celsis In Vitro, Inc. v. CellzDirect, Inc. 995 F.Supp.2d 855 (N.D.Ill.2011)) and before the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in its October 21, 2011 per curiam opinion affirming this Court, again attempts to bring LTC's elutriation process under the rubric of the Celsis patent by once more advancing its own rejected reading of its patent's language and scope. This Court sees no reason to reconsider what it held in its opinion, which was issued after a three-day evidentiary hearing that denied Celsis' second request for injunctive relief. And because the Federal Circuit's per curiam opinion is unpublished, this opinion will quote the Federal Circuit's determination at length:
In sum, although LTC's counsel have occupied 10 pages of text in their Reply Memorandum on the subject (Dkt.278) and another 3-1/2 pages in their objection to Celsis' effort to change the outcome through still another submission, the entirely persuasive arguments advanced in those filings simply drive additional nails into the already-tightly-sealed coffin that has interred Celsis' claim of infringement by LTC's newly developed process. Hence LTC is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law as to the noninfringement of Celsis' patent by LTC's elutriation process, and this Court so orders.
In an odd way, the second branch of LTC's motion for summary judgment calls on this Court to look to an opinion that disagreed with its own views in this litigation. In that respect there is no mystery as to the Federal Circuit's standard for determining the existence or nonexistence of willful infringement—here is what In re Seagate Tech., LLC, 497 F.3d 1360, 1371 (Fed.Cir.2007) held in that court's en banc decision overruling its earlier less demanding standard:
And more recently Bard Peripheral Vascular, Inc. v. W.L. Gore & Assocs., Inc., 682 F.3d 1003, 1005-06 (Fed.Cir.2012) elaborated on the Seagate-established test:
Although Bard, id. at 1006 went on to say that the "ultimate question of willfulness has long been treated as a question of fact," the circumstances of this case illustrate that such a characterization is not universal, for objective recklessness can be "a purely legal question to be determined by the judge" (id. at 1007). And in this case Circuit Judge Arthur Gajarsa (who incidentally authored the Bard opinion for the panel there) had dissented from the Federal Circuit's panel decision that upheld this Court's ruling as to the validity
LTC also claims to have another string to its bow on the willfulness issue, pointing to the decision by the PTO to reconsider Celsis' patent. But this Court need not explore that issue, for Judge Gajarsa's dissenting opinion is enough. Celsis' counsel misses the mark entirely in arguing that LTC "did not and could not rely on either of these post-litigation factors when it began infringing the '929 patent—the relevant point in time for determining its willfulness" (Celsis' Opposition Mem., Dkt. 257 at 1). That is of course nonsense, for the key issue in the analysis is not the time sequence but rather the fact that the dissenting opinion conclusively establishes that LTC's non-willfulness argument cannot be viewed as objectively reckless.
So far, then, Celsis has gone 0 for 2. LTC is entitled to a summary judgment as to the nonwillfulness of its infringement of the Celsis patent before it later developed its own elutriation process. This Court so orders.
Both issues dealt with to this point have related to the turnaround in this litigation in LTC's favor after Celsis' original victory on the infringement front. In part because the substantive area favorable to LTC has been the most recent subject matter addressed by this Court, what has gone before in this opinion has demonstrably required little fresh analysis on this Court's part.
Now however LTC's third summary judgment motion compels a return to the earlier point in the litigation, for it relates to the damages recoverable by Celsis for the infringement before LTC engineered around the Celsis patent by developing its elutriation process. There are two questions in this third area:
As to the first of those questions, 35 U.S.C. § 154(d)
Because whether claims are "substantially identical" is a question of law (see, e.g., Laitram Corp. v. NEC Corp., 163 F.3d 1342, 1346-47 (Fed.Cir.1998)),
The issue of provisional rights is a legal question ripe for summary adjudication. Indeed, Celsis' response is coupled with its own cross-motion for a partial summary judgment adjudication of the "provisional rights" issue.
To apply the "substantially identical" requirement, both parties agree that the key inquiry is as to the difference between (1) the originally published version of what later became claim 1 of the issued patent and (2) the as-issued version of that claim. Here to facilitate that comparison is the latter version, with the additions to the originally-published version (after two rounds of rejection by the patent examiner) indicated by underlining:
Where the parties differ (of course) is as whether those changes narrow the claim so as to destroy Celsis' contention of substantial identity.
Although LTC contends otherwise, it is at least arguable that adding the words "after the final thaw" clarified what was implied in the claim before that language was inserted. After all, for Celsis' method to have value, the viability of the hepatocytes must exist after the freezing-and-thawing process has been completed (not at some intermediate point), so that the express insertion of the quoted language could be said to have constituted a clarification rather than a substantive alteration of the claim's scope.
By sharp contrast, that cannot conceivably be said as to the other additions made to produce the final claim. Celsis offers the feeble excuse that the amendment in response to the examiner's rejection of the initial application claim "did not modify the scope of the claimed invention"—but when its representative was before the patent examiner, Celsis argued that the prior art references "failed to teach the claimed invention" because they "failed to teach that hepatocytes can be multiply-cryopreserved, so as to maintain a high viability over 70%, without requiring a second Percoll density gradient and without plating
In short, it is beyond dispute that the patent's claim 1 as amended is not "substantially identical" to the pre-amendment published claim. Celsis' attempt to attach the euphemistic label of "clarifying" in place of the real-world significance of its pre-issuance amendments simply will not fly. LTC's motion for summary judgment on that score must be and is granted, while Celsis' countermotion is of course denied.
Finally, LTC urges that Celsis cannot seek or obtain damages based on any LTC products that were made before the patent's issuance, even if those products were offered for sale, sold or used after issuance. That is so because the claims as issued cover a method—a process—of producing a hepatocyte preparation—that is, they do not claim the preparations themselves or the use of the preparations. That being the case, Federal Circuit caselaw teaches that "domestic entities do not infringe a process patent if they practice the process before the beginning of the patent term, even if they sell the products of the process during the term of the patent" (Monsanto Co. v. Syngenta Seeds, Inc., 503 F.3d 1352, 1360 (Fed.Cir.2007)). And Monsanto, id. went on to cite the Federal Circuit's earlier decision in Joy Techs., Inc. v. Flakt, Inc., 6 F.3d 770, 774 (Fed.Cir.1993) (emphasis added) as having "explained that a method or process claim is directly infringed only when the process is performed."
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Celsis' responsive memorandum does not quarrel with that proposition—it urges instead that LTC's motion in that respect is "premature" because discovery is needed (Celsis claims that LTC "accelerated the manufacture of its products" before the patent issued). But LTC's Reply Memorandum at 9-10 reminds us that the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of provisional rights, and this opinion has ruled that such damages are uncollectible because of the lack of substantial identity between the published patent application and the issued patent. In addition to this Court's ruling on those crossmotions, then, it denies Celsis' Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(f) motion.