This case asks us once again to examine the scope of section 1 of the Patent Act, 35 U.S.C. § 101 (1994). The United States District Court for the District of Delaware granted summary judgment to Excel Communications, Inc., Excel Communications Marketing, Inc., and Excel Telecommunications, Inc. (collectively “Excel”), holding U.S. Patent No. 5,333,184 (the 184 patent) invalid under § 101 for failure to claim statutory subject matter.
See AT&T Corp. v. Excel Communications, Inc.,
No. CIV.A.96-434-SLR,
BACKGROUND
A.
The 184 patent, entitled “Call Message Recording for Telephone Systems,” issued on July 26, 1994. It describes a message record for long-distance telephone calls that is enhanced by adding a primary interexchange carrier (“PIC”) indicator. The addition of the indicator aids long-distance carriers in providing differential billing treatment for subscribers, depending upon whether a subscriber calls someone with the same or a different long-distance carrier.
The invention claimed in the 184 patent is designed to operate in a telecommunications system with multiple long-distance service providers. The system contains local exchange carriers (“LECs”) and long-distance service (interexchange) carriers (“IXCs”). The LECs provide local telephone service and access to IXCs. Each customer has an LEC for local service and selects an IXC, such as AT & T or Excel, to be its primary long-distance service (interexchange) carrier or PIC. IXCs may own their own facilities, as does AT&T. Others, like Excel, called “resellers” or “resale carriers,” contract with facility-owners to route their subscribers’ calls through the facility-owners’ switches and transmission lines. Some IXCs, including MCI and U.S. Sprint, have a mix of their own lines and leased lines.
*1354 The system thus involves a three-step process when a caller makes a direct-dialed (1 +) long-distance telephone call: (1) after the call is transmitted over the LEC’s network to a switch, and the LEC identifies the caller’s PIC, the LEC automatically routes the call to the facilities used by the caller’s PIC; (2) the PIC’s facilities carry the call to the LEC serving the call recipient; and (3) the call recipient’s LEC delivers the call over its local network to the recipient’s telephone.
When a caller makes a direct-dialed long-distance telephone call, a switch (which may be a switch in the interex-change network) monitors and records data related to the call, generating an “automatic message account” (“AMA”) message record. This contemporaneous message record contains fields of information such as the originating and terminating telephone numbers, and the length of time of the call. These message records are then transmitted from the switch to a message accumulation system for processing and billing.
Because the message records are stored in electronic format, they can be transmitted from one computer system to another and reformatted to ease processing of the information. Thus the carrier’s AMA message subsequently is translated into the industry-standard “exchange message interface,” forwarded to a rating system, and ultimately forwarded to a billing system in which the data resides until processed to generate, typically, “hard copy” bills which are mailed to subscribers.
B.
The invention of the ’184 patent calls for the addition of a data field into a standard message record to indicate whether a call involves a particular PIC (the “PIC indicator”). This PIC indicator can exist in several forms, such as a code which identifies the call recipient’s PIC, a flag which shows that the recipient’s PIC is or is not a particular IXC, or a flag that identifies the recipient’s and the caller’s PICs as the same IXC. The PIC indicator therefore enables IXCs to provide differential billing for calls on the basis of the identified PIC.
The application that issued as the ’184 patent was filed in 1992. The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) initially rejected, for reasons unrelated to § 101, all forty-one of the originally filed claims. Following amendment, the claims were issued in 1994 in their present form. The ’184 patent contains six independent claims, five method claims and one apparatus claim, and additional dependent claims. The PTO granted the ’184 patent without questioning whether the claims were directed to statutory subject matter under § 101.
AT&T in 1996 asserted ten of the method claims against Excel in this infringement suit. The independent claims at issue (claims 1, 12, 18, and 40) include the step of “generating a message record for an interexchange call between an originating subscriber and a terminating subscriber,” and the step of adding a PIC indicator to the message record. Independent claim 1, for example, adds a PIC indicator whose value depends upon the call recipient’s PIC:
A method for use in a telecommunications system in which interexchange calls initiated by each subscriber are automatically routed over the facilities of a particular one of a plurality of interexchange carriers associated with that subscriber, said method comprising the steps of:
generating a message record for an interexchange call between an originating subscriber and a terminating subscriber, and
including, in said message record, a primary interexchange carrier (PIC) indicator having a value which is a function of whether or not the interexchange carrier associated with said terminating subscriber is a predetermined one of said interexchange carriers.
(Emphasis added.) Independent claims 12 and 40 add a PIC indicator that shows if a *1355 recipient’s PIC is the same as the IXC over which that particular call is being made. Independent claim 18 adds a PIC indicator designed to show if the caller and the recipient subscribe to the same IXC. The dependent claims at issue add the steps of accessing an IXC’s subscriber database (claims 4, 13, and 19) and billing individual calls as a function of the value of the PIC indicator (claims 6, 15, and 21).
The district court concluded that the method claims of the T84 patent implicitly recite a mathematical algorithm.
See AT&T,
DISCUSSION
A.
Summary judgment- is appropriate if there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). We review without deference a trial court’s grant of summary judgment, with all justifiable factual inferences drawn in favor of the party opposing the motion.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The issue on appeal, whether the asserted claims of the ’184 patent are invalid for failure to claim statutory subject matter under 35 U.S.C. § 101, is a question of law which we review without deference.
See Arrhythmia Research Technology v. Corazonix Corp.,
B.
Our analysis of whether a claim is directed to statutory subject matter begins with the language of 35 U.S.C. § 101, which reads:
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.
The Supreme Court has construed § 101 broadly, noting that Congress intended statutory subject matter to “include anything under the sun that is made by man.”
See Diamond v. Chakrabarty,
In this case, the method claims at issue fall within the “process”
1
category of the four enumerated categories of patentable subject matter in § 101. The district court held that the claims at issue, though otherwise within the terms of § 101, implicitly recite a mathematical algorithm,
see AT&T,
A mathematical formula alone, sometimes referred to as a mathematical algorithm, viewed in the abstract, is considered unpatentable subject matter.
See Diamond v. Diehr,
This court recently pointed out that any step-by-step process, be it electronic, chemical, or mechanical, involves an “algorithm” in the broad sense of the term.
See State Street Bank & Trust Co. v. Signature Fin. Group, Inc.,
Since the process of manipulation of numbers is a fundamental part of computer technology, we have had to reexamine the rules that govern the patentability of such technology. The sea-changes in both law and technology stand as a testament to the ability of law to adapt to new and innovative concepts, while remaining true to basic principles. In an earlier era, the PTO published guidelines essentially rejecting the notion that computer programs were patentable.
2
As the technology progressed, our predecessor court disagreed, and, overturning some of the earlier limiting principles regarding § 101, announced more expansive principles formulated with computer technology in mind.
3
In our recent decision in
State Street,
this court discarded the so-called “business method” exception and reassessed the “mathematical algorithm” exception,
see
The Supreme Court has supported and enhanced this effort. In
Diehr,
the Court expressly limited its two earlier decisions in
Flook
and
Benson
by emphasizing that these eases did no more than confirm the “long-established principle” that laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are excluded from patent protection.
As previously noted, we most recently addressed the “mathematical algorithm” exception in
State Street. See
The
State Street
formulation, that a mathematical algorithm may be an integral part of patentable subject matter such as a machine or process if the claimed invention as a whole is applied in a “useful” manner, follows the approach taken by this court en banc in
In re Alappat,
[The Court] never intended to create an overly broad, fourth category of [mathematical] subject matter excluded from § 101. Rather, at the core of the Court’s analysis ... lies an attempt by the Court to explain a rather straightforward concept, namely, that certain types of mathematical subject matter, standing alone, represent nothing more than abstract ideas until reduced to some type of practical application, and thus that subject matter is not, in and of itself, entitled to patent protection.
Id. at 1543, 31 USPQ2d at 1556-57 (emphasis added). Thus, the Alappat inquiry simply requires an examination of the contested claims to see if the claimed subject matter as a whole is a disembodied mathematical concept representing nothing more than a “law of nature” or an “abstract idea,” or if the mathematical concept has been reduced to some practical application rendering it “useful.” Id at 1544, 31 USPQ2d at 1557. In Alappat, we held that more than an abstract idea was claimed because the claimed invention as a whole was directed toward forming a specific machine that produced the useful, concrete, and tangible result of a smooth waveform display. See id. at 1544, 31 USPQ2d at 1557.
In both
Alappat
and
State Street,
the claim was for a machine that achieved certain results. In the case before us, because Excel does not own or operate the facilities over which its calls are placed, AT&T did not charge Excel with infringement of its apparatus claims, but limited its infringement charge to the specified method or process claims. Whether stated implicitly or explicitly, we consider the scope of § 101 to be the same regardless of the form — machine or process — in which a particular claim is drafted.
See, e.g., In
*1358
re Alappat,
C.
In light of this review of the current understanding of the “mathematical algorithm” exception, we turn now to the arguments of the parties in support of and in opposition to the trial court’s judgment. We note that, at the time the trial court made its decision, that court did not have the benefit of this court’s explication in State Street of the mathematical algorithm issue.
As previously explained, AT&T’s claimed process employs subscribers’ and call recipients’ PICs as data, applies Boolean algebra to those data to determine the value of the PIC indicator, and applies that value through switching and recording mechanisms to create a signal useful for billing purposes. In
State Street,
we held that the processing system there was patentable subject matter because the system takes data representing discrete dollar amounts through a series of mathematical calculations to determine a final share price — a useful, concrete, and tangible result.
See
In this case, Excel argues, correctly, that the PIC indicator value is derived using a simple mathematical principle (p and q). But that is not determinative because AT&T does not claim the Boolean principle as such or attempt to forestall its use in any other application. It is clear from the written description of the 184 patent that AT&T is only claiming a process that uses the Boolean principle in order to determine the value of the PIC indicator. The PIC indicator represents information about the call recipient’s PIC, a useful, non-abstract result that facilitates differential billing of long-distance calls made by an IXC’s subscriber. Because the claimed process applies the Boolean principle to produce a useful, concrete, tangible result without pre-empting other uses of the mathematical principle, on its face the claimed process comfortably falls within the scope of § 101.
See Arrhythmia Research Technology, Inc. v. Corazonix Corp.,
Excel argues that method claims containing mathematical algorithms are patentable subject matter only if there is a “physical transformation” or conversion of subject matter from one state into another. The physical transformation language appears in
Diehr, see
The notion of “physical transformation” can be misunderstood. In the first place, it is not an invariable requirement, but merely one example of how a mathematical algorithm may bring about a useful application. As the Supreme Court itself not
*1359
ed, “when [a claimed invention] is performing a function which the patent laws were designed to protect
(e.g.,
transforming or reducing an article to a different state or thing), then the claim satisfies the requirements of § 101.”
Diehr,
This understanding of transformation is consistent with our earlier decision in
Arrhythmia,
Excel also contends that because the process claims at issue lack physical limitations set forth in the patent, the claims are not patentable subject matter. This argument reflects a misunderstanding of our case law. The cases cited by Excel for this proposition involved machine claims written in means-plus-function language.
See, e.g., State Street,
The argument that physical limitations are necessary may also stem from the second part of the
Freeman-Walter-Abele
test,
4
an earlier test which has been used to identify claims thought to involve unpat-entable mathematical algorithms. That second part was said to inquire “whether the claim is directed to a mathematical algorithm that is not applied to or limited by physical elements.”
Arrhythmia,
Because we focus on the inquiry deemed “the ultimate issue” by
Alappat,
rather than on the physical limitations inquiry of
*1360
the
Freeman-Walter-Abele
test, we find the eases cited by Excel in support of its position to be inapposite. For example, in
In re Grams,
the court applied the
Freeman-Walter-Abele
test and concluded that the only physical step in the claimed process involved data-gathering for the algorithm; thus, the claims were held to be directed to unpatentable subject matter.
See
Similarly, the court in
In re Schrader
relied upon the
Freeman-Walter-Abele
test for its analysis of the method claim involved. The court found neither a physical transformation nor any physical step in the claimed process aside from the entering of data into a record.
See
Finally, the decision in
In re Warmerdam,
D.
In his dissent in Diehr, Justice Stevens noted two concerns regarding the § 101 issue, and to which, in his view, federal judges have a duty to respond:
First, the cases considering the patenta-bility of program-related inventions do not establish rules that enable a conscientious patent lawyer to determine with a fair degree of accuracy which, if any, program-related inventions will be patentable. Second, the inclusion of the ambiguous concept of an “algorithm” within the “law of nature” category of unpatentable subject matter has given rise to the concern that almost any process might be so described and therefore held unpatentable.
Diehr,
Despite the almost twenty years since Justice Stevens wrote, these concerns remain important. His solution was to declare all computer-based programming un-patentable. That has not been the course the law has taken. Rather, it is now clear that computer-based programming constitutes patentable subject matter so long as the basic requirements of § 101 are met. Justice Stevens’s concerns can be addressed within that framework.
*1361 His first concern, that the rules are not sufficiently clear to enable reasonable prediction of outcomes, should be less of a concern today in light of the refocusing of the § 101 issue that Alappat and State Street have provided. His second concern, that the ambiguous concept of “algorithm” could be used to make any process unpat-entable, can be laid to rest once the focus is understood to be not on whether there is a mathematical algorithm at work, but on whether the algorithm-containing invention, as a whole, produces a tangible, useful, result.
In light of the above, and consistent with the clearer understanding that our more recent cases have provided, we conclude that the district court did not apply the proper analysis to the method claims at issue. Furthermore, had the court applied the proper analysis to the stated claims, the court would have concluded that all the claims asserted fall comfortably within the broad scope of patentable subject matter under § 101. Accordingly, we hold as a matter of law that Excel was not entitled to the grant of summary judgment of invalidity of the ’184 patent under § 101.
Since the case must be returned to the trial court for further proceedings, and to avoid any possible misunderstandings as to the scope of our decision, we note that the ultimate validity of these claims depends upon their satisfying the other requirements for patentability such as those set forth in 35 U.S.C. §§ 102, 103, and 112. Thus, on remand, those questions, as well as any others the parties may properly raise, remain for disposition.
CONCLUSION
The district court’s summary judgment of invalidity is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED & REMANDED.
Notes
. "Process” is defined in 35 U.S.C. § 100(b) to encompass: "[a] process, art or method, and includes a new use of a known process. machine, manufacture, composition of matter, or material.”
. See, e.g., 33 Fed.Reg. 15581, 15609-10 (1968).
.
See In re Tarczy-Hornoch,
. See
In re Freeman,
