Neither party construed the term “processor,” but the Board decided construction was necessary. The Board found that the specification did not offer a definition of the term “processor” or show that the inventor acted as a lexicographer. The Board then turned to the “definition for ‘processor’ in The Authoritative Dictionary of IEEE Standards Terms” and construed “processor” to require that “a ‘processor’ has to execute code, program, or instructions, and cannot be met simply by any electrical circuit.” Because the Board found that the alleged prior art processor did not execute code, it denied institution.
In granting Director Review, the Director held that the Board erred in construing the claimed “processor” based solely on extrinsic evidence without first thoroughly considering all of the intrinsic evidence. The Board did not consider the claim as a whole by focusing on only the term “processor” without evaluating the function attributed to the processor later in the claim — “discriminating between gesture and no gesture based on a direction of said acceleration signal.” The Board also did not adequately consider the specification, which described a processor “for executing programmable software code for analyzing the accelerations values delivered by the accelerometer, and for generating signals or values when certain conditions are met.” The Director found that the claim language does not include the specification’s description of “executing programmable software code,” suggesting that the term is broader than the embodiment in the specification. Given the intrinsic evidence, the Director found that the Board relied too heavily on the dictionary definition in a manner divorced from the intrinsic record and remanded for proper consideration of the term processor and the other issues involved in the proceeding.
Luminex International Co., Ltd. v. Signify Holdings B.V., IPR2024-00101 (PTAB August 20, 2024)
The Director vacated the Board’s decision denying institution due to the petitioner’s time bar, finding that a customer of the petitioner was not a real party in interest of the petitioner and, thus, a complaint against the customer more than one year before the petition did not create a time bar.
Summary
In IPR2024-00101, Luminex International Co., Ltd. (“Luminex”) filed a petition requesting IPR of claims of a patent owned by Signify Holdings B.V. (“Signify”). Signify initially asserted its patent against Menard, Inc. (“Menard”), a customer of Luminex. Two months after Signify’s complaint against Menard, Menard filed a third-party complaint in the litigation asserting a count of indemnification against Luminex, thereby bringing its supplier, Luminex, into the litigation. Luminex filed a petition for IPR of Signify’s patent within one year of the third-party complaint filed against it by Menard, but more than one year after Signify’s initial complaint against Menard. The Board denied institution, finding that Menard was a real party in interest of Luminex and that Luminex’s petition was time-barred because it was filed more than one year after Signify’s complaint against Menard.
The Director vacated the institution decision and remanded to the panel to determine whether the grounds in the petition raised a reasonable likelihood of success. The Director disagreed with the Board’s determination that the facts of record establish that Menard is a real party in interest to Luminex’s petition. The Director also found that the evidence does not establish Menard to be a privy of Luminex and that 35 U.S.C. § 315(a)(1) does not apply to the “cross-claims” asserted by Luminex in the litigation, two issues raised by Signify but not reached by the panel due to the panel’s finding on real party in interest. To avoid delay, the Director remanded to the panel for a determination on the merits of Luminex’s petition without providing reasoning for her decisions, indicating that she will issue a subsequent opinion in due course that details the reasoning for her determinations.
PLR Worldwide Sales Ltd. v. Flip Phone Games Inc., IPR2024-00133 (PTAB August 22, 2024)
The Director vacated the Board’s decision denying institution because the Board relied on a claim construction that was improperly based on the subjective views of the user.
Summary
In IPR2024-00133, the Board issued a split decision denying institution based on an implicit construction of the claim term “non-promotional background object.” The specification did not define or even use the phrase “non-promotional background object” or “background object,” but it was discussed in the prosecution history. Specifically, during prosecution, the applicant argued that “‘non-promotional background objects’ are not game components, i.e., ‘featured objects that a user manipulates in order to play the game,’ but are rather ‘outside of the primary focus of game play’ and ‘are not themselves needed or required in order to play the game.’” The majority relied on these statements to determine that “non-promotional background objects” required objects that were “outside the primary focus of game play and as unexpectedly interactive components.” Relying on this interpretation, the Board denied institution because the objects in the prior art did not meet these requirements.
The Director agreed with the dissent that the majority’s consideration here of what a user would expect (“unexpectedly interactive”) was improperly based on the subjective perspective of a user. Amazon.com, Inc. v. Barnesandnoble.com, Inc., 239 F.3d 1343, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“We are not prepared to assign a meaning to a patent claim that depends on the state of mind of the accused infringer.”) Because of the error in claim construction, the Director vacated the institution decision and remanded to the panel to issue a new decision on institution resolving the claim construction of “a non-promotional background object” consistent with Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1313–14 (Fed. Cir. 2005) by first assessing the intrinsic evidence and then consulting extrinsic evidence if necessary.
In other Director Review news, on October 1, the Office published a final rule on Director Review of Patent Trial and Appeal Board decisions that is scheduled to take effect on October 31. The final rule replaces the current interim Director Review process and makes several changes to the proposed rule of April 2024. We are reviewing the final rule to determine its implications for post-grant practitioners and parties to post-grant proceedings and will issue an update soon.