Cygnus Telecommunications Technology, LLC, has filed two appeals from a final judgment in this multidistrict litigation proceeding. In the first, Cygnus has appealed from a judgment in favor of Telesys Communications, LLC, and seven other defendants (the “Telesys defendants”). In the second, Cygnus has appealed from a judgment in favor of defendant AT & T Corp. In both cases, Cygnus appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment that U.S. patent numbers 5,883,964 and 6,035,027 are invalid under the on-sale bar of 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). In addition, in the case against AT & T, Cygnus appeals from the district court’s summary judgment of noninfringement and the dismissal of Cygnus’s trade secret misappropriation claims. We affirm the judgment in all respects in both appeals.
I
In the late 1980s, placing a telephone call from the United States to a foreign country was typically less expensive than placing the same call from the foreign country to the United States. In 1988, James Alleman founded Paragon Services
Mr. Alleman subsequently developed a system to carry out the same process by using a computer rather than the black box. He created a prototype of the new system on a 386 computer (“the 386 system”). Instead of having a dedicated line for each user, the 386 system identified users by reference to the international telephone numbers from which they made their initial calls. Part of the user’s telephone number would be passed along to the 386 system by the telephone company’s local exchange carrier. The 386 system would use that information to search its database and identify the foreign user. The system would then terminate the call from the user and promptly call the user back. The user could subsequently enter the number of its desired destination call, and the 386 system would place that call from within the United States and bridge the two calls together.
Mr. Alleman asserts that in order to develop the software necessary for the 386 system, he worked with a computer engineer named Jim Gunther. Throughout the development process, Mr. Alleman also worked with several individuals overseas who first used the black box system and then used the 386 system. Mr. Alle-man described two of those individuals, Theo Brenner and Fadi Ghandour, as “beta-testers” who helped him troubleshoot the 386 system. Those individuals were also regularly invoiced for the cost of their telephone calls. During that period, Mr. Alleman had discussions with another telecommunications company, Call Interactive, as to how they could implement and market his invention on a commercial scale.
Mr. Alleman filed a patent application for his computerized callback system on April 24, 1992. The application led to the issuance of U.S. Patent No. 5,883,964 (“the '964 patent”) and its successor, U.S. Patent No. 6,035,027 (“the '027 patent”). Paragon’s successor-in-interest, Cygnus, later brought infringement suits against the defendants-appellees alleging infringement of both patents. The various actions were ultimately transferred and consolidated into a single multidistrict proceeding before the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. On November 24, 2004, AT & T moved to dismiss Cygnus’s trade secret misappropriation claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12, arguing that it was barred by the statute of limitations. After permitting Cygnus to amend its complaint, the district court granted AT & T’s motion.
On October 27, 2006, AT
&
T filed a motion on behalf of all defendants for summary judgment of invalidity based on prior public use and commercial sales of the subject matter of the patents. Several of the defendants also filed motions for sum
II
On appeal, the defendants first assert that Cygnus is collaterally estopped from challenging the invalidity of the '964 and '027 patents under section 102(b) because it failed to appeal the district court’s entry of final judgment against one defendant in the multidistrict litigation below. The defendant to which the appellees point is Heritage Communications Corp., which was granted summary judgment but which was not included in Cygnus’s appeal.
It is a firmly established principle that a judgment of a patent invalidity in one case can collaterally estop the patent owner from contesting invalidity in a subsequent case, as long as the patent owner had a “full and fair opportunity to litigate the validity of the patent” in the first case.
Miss. Chem. Corp. v. Swift Agric. Chems. Corp.,
Because the multiple actions filed against various defendants were all consolidated in a single MDL proceeding, we believe that for purposes of analysis of preclusion doctrines, the proceeding is most logically viewed as a single, multi-defendant lawsuit. From that perspective, the defendant’s collateral estoppel argument, reduced to its essentials, is that if a court enters a judgment of patent invalidity against a patentee in a multi-defendant action, and the patentee appeals that judgment against fewer than all of the defendants, the appellees can invoke collateral estoppel based on the final judgment in favor of the defendant as to whom the patentee did not appeal. As a result, the patentee’s decision not to appeal against one defendant will mean that the patentee loses its right to an appellate decision on the merits against all of them.
The defendants cite no authority that stands for that proposition. The one case they cite, other than for broad general principles of collateral estoppel, is
Odetics, Inc. v. Storage Tech. Corp.,
The Supreme Court has described the doctrine of collateral estoppel as follows: “Under collateral estoppel, once an issue is actually and necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, that determination is conclusive in subsequent suits based on a different cause of action involving a party to the prior litigation.”
Montana v. United States,
This case is effectively controlled by our prior decision in
Innovad Inc. v. Microsoft
By its terms, the doctrine of issue preclusion is not available at this stage of this adjudicative process. Moreover, for excellent policy reasons, the doctrine of issue preclusion does not require Inno-vad to include all parties involved below in its appeal, which would preclude the opportunity of settlement with any party before appeal. Innovad can preserve its full rights to appeal without including all parties to the district court’s judgment.
Id. at 1334.
As the court stated in Innovad, there are strong policy reasons for not applying collateral estoppel in this context. To adopt the defendants’ rule would promote judicial inefficiency and the waste of litigants’ resources, as it would require appellants to prosecute appeals against every defendant in a multi-defendant case, even if there were strong practical or legal reasons for narrowing the scope of the appeal. At the same time, it would not serve the underlying purposes of the collateral es-toppel doctrine, which are to give a party one full and fair opportunity to litigate a particular issue, while preventing needless relitigation of that issue. In a case such as this one, the plaintiff is not seeking to obtain a second bite at the apple on an issue decided against it in a previous case; rather, the plaintiff is seeking review of an adverse decision in the first and only case in which the issue has been presented. The fact that the plaintiff has elected not to pursue its appellate rights against all of the defendants should be no basis for holding that it may not pursue those rights against any of them. Accordingly, we decline to apply collateral estoppel against Cygnus. 1
Ill
The district court ruled, on summary judgment, that the '964 and '027 patents are invalid under the on-sale bar of 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). The district court’s ruling was based on Mr. Alleman’s sale of the 386 system to paying users and the commercialization agreement that Paragon and Call Interactive entered into before the critical date for both patents, April 24, 1991. The district court determined that the 386 system had been reduced to practice based on Mr. Alleman’s sworn declaration to the Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) in which he stated, “I reduced to practice the invention of the claims before June 27, 1990.” The court relied on that representation after concluding that Cygnus had presented no satisfactory explana
The district court also rejected Cygnus’s argument that the use of the 386 system prior to the critical date fell within the “experimental use” exception to the public use or on-sale bar of section 102(b). In so ruling, the court relied on this court’s decisions holding that the experimental use exception is not available after an invention has been reduced to practice.
Finally, the district court concluded that because Mr. Alleman had charged users of the 386 system for the calls they made using that system, he engaged in a “sale” of the service within the meaning of section 102(b) even if he did not make a profit on the transactions. For the reasons below, we affirm the district court’s holding with respect to the 386 system. Accordingly, we do not need to reach the portion of the district court’s opinion addressing the legal effect, for validity purposes, of the agreement between Paragon and Call Interactive.
A
As an initial matter, we note that on appeal Cygnus has cited various portions of the record below that were not presented to the district court in conjunction with the briefing on the section 102(b) summary judgment motion. Cygnus has not offered any explanation for its failure to bring the materials it now cites to the district court’s attention in connection with the summary judgment motion. Instead, Cygnus takes the position that in challenging the summary judgment order entered by the district court, it is entitled to rely on any materials that were submitted to the district court for any purpose at any time during the course of the litigation. For example, many of the documents that Cygnus cites in its appellate briefs were submitted to the district court below for the first time on May 3, 2007, after the district court had issued its section 102(b) ruling two months earlier.
To justify relying on those other materials, including materials filed after the summary judgment decision, Cygnus points to a statement made by this court in an order resolving a motion submitted by the Tele-sys defendants to strike portions of the joint appendix. The Telesys defendants had claimed that Cygnus had included in the joint appendix various materials that were not in the record below. This court denied that motion because the pertinent materials had been filed in the district court and thus were part of the “record on appeal” within the meaning of Rule 10 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. We explained that “[i]f a document was filed in the district court, it is part of the record on appeal even if the document was filed in connection with a particular legal issue.” Cygnus’s reliance on that statement is misplaced, however, because the statement pertained only to the proper scope of the record on appeal. It was not relevant to the question presented here, which is what part of the record on appeal was specifically presented to the district court in connection with a particular legal issue. That distinction is clearly illustrated by the facts of this case. The exhibits Cygnus cites from the May 3, 2007, filing are indisputably part of the record below and thus part of the record on appeal, but they were not presented to the district judge in connection with the section 102(b) summary judgment briefing. Indeed, it would have been physically impossible for the district court to consider, in connection with that order, those documents that it did not receive until several months after the order was entered.
In deciding procedural issues not affecting substantive patent law principles,
This case has a record of ordinary length, and was of ordinary duration, yet a judge would have to read several reams of paper, going back two years, to find the text establishing the genuine issue of fact, because it was not in the opposition to the summary judgment motion. A substantial number of cases have records that fill a drawer or two of a filing cabinet, and some big cases sometimes fill multiple five-drawer file cabinets in the clerks’ offices. A lawyer drafting an opposition to a summary judgment motion may easily show a judge, in the opposition, the evidence that the lawyer wants the judge to read. It is absurdly difficult for a judge to perform a search, unassisted by counsel, through the entire record, to look for such evidence....
The alternative, requiring the district court to search the entire record, even though the adverse party’s response does not set out the specific facts or disclose where in the record the evidence for them can be found, is unfair. The cases often refer to the unfairness to the district court, which is substantial, but hardly the full story. If a district court must examine reams or file cabinets full of paper looking for genuine issues of fact, as though the judge were the adverse party’s lawyer, an enormous amount of time is taken away from other litigants. Other litigants could have that judicial time, and get their cases resolved better and faster, if the district court could limit examination to the materials submitted in opposition to the summary judgment motion.
Requiring the district court to search the entire record for a genuine issue of fact, even though the adverse party does not set it out in the opposition papers, is also profoundly unfair to the movant. The gist of a summary judgment motion is to require the adverse party to show that it has a claim or defense, and has evidence sufficient to allow a jury to find in its favor on that claim or defense. The opposition sets it out, and then the movant has a fair chance in its reply papers to show why the respondent’s evidence fails to establish a genuine issue of material fact. If the district court, or later this court, searches the whole record, in practical effect, the court becomes the lawyer for the respondent, performing the lawyer’s dutyof setting forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. The movant is then denied a fair opportunity to address the matter in the reply papers.
B
A patent is invalid under the section 102(b) on-sale bar if, prior to the critical date, the invention was ready for patenting and was the subject of a commercial sale or offer for sale.
Pfaff v. Wells Elec., Inc.,
The district court held that the computerized callback system met the “ready for patenting” prong of the Pfaff test because, in his February 12, 1997, declaration that was submitted to the PTO in connection with his patent application (the “1997 Alte-rnan declaration”), Mr. Alternan admitted that his invention was reduced to practice before June 27, 1990. On appeal, Cygnus argues that it should not be bound by Mr. Alleman’s sworn statements, for several reasons. First, Cygnus contends that because the PTO did not ultimately rely on that declaration to issue the patents, Cygnus should not be bound by Mr. Alleman’s claim that the reduction to practice occurred before June 27, 1990. Second, Cygnus argues that the declaration does not support a reduction to practice before June 27, 1990, because the declaration suffered from “internal inconsistencies.” Finally, Cygnus argues that the district court should have credited statements Mr. Alternan submitted to the PTO in 1994 (the “1994 Alternan declaration”) and in his 2006 deposition, in which he explained why the statements he made in the 1997 declaration were mistaken. Further issues of material fact are purportedly raised by Jim Gunther’s 1999 declaration to the PTO and the deposition testimony of Thomas D. Thompson.
Although Cygnus attempts to create an issue of material fact by citing to these various sources, almost none of them were submitted to the district court in connection with the section 102(b) summary judgment motion. In response to the motion, Cygnus filed a declaration of Mr. Alternan that is dated October 31, 2007 (but presumably was meant to be dated October 31, 2006), and several exhibits attached to that motion. Those exhibits included portions of an invoice from Dialogic Corporation and a tetter from Call Interactive dated March 6, 1991. On the defendants’ motion, the district court struck portions of the declaration from the record.
Only a few of the documents that Cygnus relies on for purposes of this appeal were before the district court when the summary judgment motion was being litigated. The documents that Cygnus refers to in its brief that were before the district court include the March 5, 1990, invoice, one page from the deposition of Thomas D. Thompson, and six pages from Mr. Alle-man’s 2006 deposition. Cygnus cites the invoice to demonstrate than an order for Dialogic boards, which Mr. Alternan hoped
Accordingly, we agree with the district court that Cygnus is bound by the statements that Mr. Alleman made in his declaration to the PTO, regardless of whether the declaration was necessary for the issuance of the patent. Cygnus simply failed to offer sufficient evidence before the district court to undermine the force of his sworn admission regarding the date that he reduced his invention to practice. As the Supreme Court explained in
Cleveland v. Policy Mgmt. Sys. Corp.,
In his 1997 declaration, Mr. Alleman both directly stated that the invention was reduced to practice by June 27, 1990, and provided facts sufficient to support that conclusion. Any alleged internal inconsistencies in those documents were the responsibility of Cygnus, as the applicant, and do not provide an excuse for Cygnus to disavow the clear statements by the inventor regarding the date of reduction to practice.
On appeal, Cygnus does not rely on Mr. Alleman’s October 31, 2006, declaration to support any substantive argument challenging the district court’s summary judgment of invalidity. In any event, however, that declaration does not undermine Mr. Alleman’s earlier admissions, as it consists mainly of (1) his contention that the 386 system was not the claimed invention because it “would not scale for commercial
With respect to the argument that the 386 system was not ready for patenting because the 386 system would not work on a commercial scale, the district court correctly ruled that the question whether the 386 system would work on a commercial scale is distinct from whether the system embodied the claims in the two patents at issue. See
Allen Eng’g Corp. v. Bartell Indus., Inc.,
With respect to the argument that Mr. Brenner and Mr. Ghandour were merely “beta testers,” the district court properly concluded that in light of the undisputed evidence that they paid to use the 386 system, there was a sale of the service. On appeal, Cygnus contends that it is a disputed question of material fact whether Brenner and Ghandour were “paying customers.” Because the two of them were never deposed, Cygnus argues that the district court must have drawn inferences in favor of the defendants in order to rule in their favor, thereby contravening the summary judgment standard established in
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
Athough Cygnus relies on
Adickes
to suggest that defendants-appellees needed to disprove that Brenner and Ghandour were beta testers, more recent Supreme Court cases regarding the summary judgment standard make clear that
Adickes
does not support Cygnus’s position here. Rather, AT & T has properly established a sale by relying on the Aleman testimony.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Cygnus also argues that Brenner and Ghandour’s use of the 386 system did not involve a commercial sale because their use of the system was part of Mr. Alle-man’s experimentation and thus was excluded from commercial use by the experimental use doctrine. Cygnus claims that it was necessary to have Brenner and Ghandour call from abroad to test the system’s functionality and troubleshoot any problems. The district court ruled that the experimental use doctrine did not apply after June 27, 1990, because the invention had been reduced to practice. We affirm the district court’s ruling based on this court’s law that “experimental use cannot occur after a reduction to practice.”
Cont’l Plastic Containers v. Owens Brockway Plastic Prods., Inc.,
Cygnus also argues that as “a matter of fact and a matter of law,” the district court’s statement regarding public use in footnote 15 of the court’s opinion “compels reversal of the on-sale bar.” In that footnote, the district court stated: “This court does not reach defendants’ argument that Mr. Alleman’s activity in providing service to individuals according to the method and system claimed in the patents-in-suit using his 386 system was public use of the claimed invention.” Cygnus relies on that statement to argue that because the district court found no public use prior to the critical date, there could not have been any invalidating commercial use. Cygnus’s argument, however, relies on a misreading of the district court’s statement, which plainly indicates that it made no findings at all with respect to public use. Even if it had, there would be no necessary effect on the commercial use ruling. Accordingly, we hold that footnote 15 does not require reversal. The defendants also urge affir-mance of the district court’s holding of invalidity on the alternative ground of public use. Given our holding on commercial use, however, we do not need to reach that issue.
We also do not need to reach the district court’s rulings of noninfringement with respect to certain of the defendants. In any event, we note that in its opening brief in the Telesys appeal, Cygnus did not explicitly present any argument for why the summary judgment of noninfringement should be reversed. Hence, any such arguments have been waived. 3
In addition to the issues common to both appeals, Cygnus raises in its appeal against AT & T the district court’s dismissal of its trade secret misappropriation claims on statute of limitations grounds. In its second amended complaint, Cygnus claimed that during negotiations with AT & T in the mid-1990s, it had given AT & T access to its computerized callback technology, including the patent applications that issued as the patents-in-suit. Although AT & T ultimately declined to enter into a business relationship with Cygnus, it launched its own computerized callback service in 1996. Cygnus alleges that AT & T’s service used Cygnus’s technology.
The district court dismissed Cygnus’s complaint as time-barred under the three-year statute of limitations for trade secret misappropriation under Minnesota state law. Minn.Stat. § 325C.06. Under Minnesota law, the statute of limitations begins to run once a lawsuit could survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
Herrmann v. McMenomy & Severson,
Cygnus argues on appeal, as it did before the district court, that the statute of limitations should not have started running until 2005, when AT & T’s counsel allegedly admitted during an in-court argument that AT & T used Cygnus’s technology in its 1996 callback services. Cygnus claims that it had no reason to suspect misappropriation by AT & T before that time, particularly because the negotiations between the two companies had led Cygnus to believe that AT & T would pay a royalty if it decided to use Cygnus’s technology. Cygnus also argues that before the 2005 admission, it had no means of knowing whether AT & T was using the precise callback technology encompassed by its patents, or some variant of that technology-
We affirm the district court’s ruling. Between knowing that AT
&
T had access to Cygnus’s proprietary callback technology and knowing of AT & T’s launch of its callback services,. Cygnus had possession of sufficient facts to allege trade secret misappropriation, and that is all that Minnesota law requires.
See Dalton v. Dow Chem. Co.,
Cygnus also argues that AT & T fraudulently concealed its interest in Cygnus’s callback technology, and that the statute of limitations should therefore be tolled. Although that argument was not made below, it would not merit reversal of the district court’s decision in any event. The district court’s ruling was based on its conclusion that Cygnus had enough information as of 1996 to file a trade secret misappropriation suit against AT & T. Given Cygnus’s possession of sufficient facts to state a claim, it is irrelevant whether AT & T may have concealed anything else.
Finally, Cygnus alleges that AT
&
T is liable for a breach of promise to pay commissions for its use of callback technology. That claim was not pleaded or presented to the district court below. Accord
V
Apart from the merits of the appeal, Cygnus and defendant AT & T have submitted detailed motions to this court regarding the contents of the joint appendix and the costs associated with the production of the appendix. Cygnus moved to assess costs for being forced to include improper materials in the appendix, and AT & T moved to strike portions of the joint appendix and Cygnus’s reply brief. For the following reasons, both parties’ motions are denied.
A
Cygnus moved to assess costs against AT & T for preparing parts of the appendix that were allegedly “prohibited.” Federal Circuit Rule 30(a)(2)(D) provides: “If the appellant considers that parts of the record have been referenced in violation of this rule, the appellant may so advise the appellee and the appellee must advance the costs of including those parts in the appendix.” Cygnus contends that AT & T designated a total of 954 unnecessary pages for the appendix, which entitles Cygnus to compensation in the amount of $958.27.
Cygnus first objects to AT & T’s inclusion of the briefs underlying the district court’s order to dismiss Cygnus’s trade secret misappropriation claims under Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Cygnus acknowledges that in an appeal from the grant of summary judgment, the Federal Circuit Rules permit the inclusion in the appendix of the summary judgment briefing in its entirety. Fed. Cir. R. 30(a)(2)(F)(iii). Cygnus contends, however, that there is no justification for including all of the Rule 12 briefing, especially given that the district court expressly declined to convert the motion into one for summary judgment. While Federal Circuit Rule 30 expressly refers only to summary judgment, it is relevant by analogy to the inclusion of the briefing on a motion to dismiss where the propriety of a dismissal order is at issue on appeal. Counsel should use their considered judgment in determining whether inclusion of such briefing is always necessary, particularly where the briefing is lengthy or many of the issues below are not raised on appeal. However, Cygnus has not presented any such arguments for why inclusion of the particular briefing at issue in this case was wasteful. Accordingly, we decline to find that the inclusion of that material was improper.
Cygnus also objects to AT & T’s alleged duplication of materials already present in the portion of the appendix that Cygnus designated. In particular, Cygnus objects to AT & T’s duplication of parts of Defendants’ Joint Motion for Summary Judgment for Invalidity under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b), the associated declaration, and some of the exhibits. AT & T responded by explaining that its version included the table of contents and two exhibits that were omitted from Cygnus’s version. Although duplication in the appendix should generally be avoided, AT
&
T explains that inclusion of all the summary judgment briefing and associated declarations in one distinct part of the appendix was pertinent to support one of AT & T’s primary arguments on appeal, namely that Cygnus cited to parts of the record below that were not before the district court in the section 102(b) summary judgment briefing. Cygnus objects to that justification and argues, as it did on the merits, that it was entitled to cite anything in the record on appeal to make its case for overturning the section 102(b) summary judgment ruling. As we explained earlier, that argument is incorrect. Hence, AT & T’s proffered reason
Although Cygnus does not present additional argument in its opening motion on the remainder of the allegedly improper 954 pages, it appears to have incorporated by reference arguments it made in an email exchange with AT & T. In that exchange, Cygnus objected to the inclusion of the section 102(b) summary judgment briefing. Again citing Federal Circuit Rule 30(a)(2)(F)(iii), Cygnus argues that the rule allows the inclusion of the full summary judgment briefing only where summary judgment is the “sole” issue on appeal. Because other issues were appealed, Cygnus argues that including the full briefing was not proper. As noted, however, nothing in the cited rule prohibits the inclusion of the full summary judgment briefing in other instances when it is relevant to the issues raised on appeal. In this case, where it was important for the court to examine precisely what was submitted to the district court in connection with the summary judgment motion, the inclusion of the associated briefing was appropriate. Accordingly, Cygnus’s objections with respect to AT & T’s index numbers 291, 304, 309, 400, 409, 423, 113, 657, 664, 741, 679, 709, and 725 on this basis are unfounded and no costs will be assessed relating to those materials.
In the email exchange, Cygnus also alleged a series of other duplications, including AT & T’s index numbers 182, 530, 679, 725, and 741. The materials corresponding to AT & T’s index number 679 were subsequently deleted from Cygnus’s portion of the appendix. The remaining duplications total 35 pages. That amount of duplication, while not to be encouraged, is de minimis and does not warrant assessing costs. 4 An additional index number that was allegedly duplicated, index number 735, was not included in AT & T’s final index and will therefore be disregarded.
In the email exchange, Cygnus further contended that several of AT & T’s appendix materials were barred from inclusion by Federal Circuit Rule 30(a)(2)(E)(i), which provides that “briefs and memoran-da in their entirety” should not be included in the joint appendix “except by leave of the court” or as “otherwise provided in Federal Circuit Rule 30.” The index numbers that Cygnus has listed, however, are not briefs or memoranda. 5 Because those pages are not precluded by Rule 30(a)(2)(E)(i) and because Cygnus makes no additional arguments for why those pages were improper, we find that the materials were properly included and that AT & T should not be assessed costs in connection with the inclusion of those pages.
Finally, the email exchange suggested that Cygnus contested the inclusion of any materials from the consolidated multidistrict litigation in the joint appendix on the ground that the instant appeal pertains to AT & T alone. In particular,
We note that Cygnus cites to Federal Circuit Rule 30(a)(2)(D) for the proposition that AT & T should have advanced Cygnus the costs based on Cygnus’s representation that AT & T’s materials were improper. The rule does provide for the immediate transfer of funds, but because Cygnus would now have to return the $958.27 in costs, any argument on that ground is moot.
B
AT & T moved to strike portions of the appendix and of several sentences from Cygnus’s reply brief. AT & T lists seven sections of the appendix — index numbers 23, 25, 111, and 112 — that it contends were not a part of the record below. 6 AT & T also argues that two items — index numbers 35 and 37 — were not before the district court in connection with any of the issues raised on appeal. The record on appeal includes “the original papers and exhibits filed in the district court.” Fed. R.App. P. 10(a). Consequently, because AT & T essentially admits that items 35 and 37 were filed in the court below, AT & T’s motion with respect to those items is denied.
In its opposition, Cygnus claimed that the remaining items had been submitted at various times to the district court. Cygnus argued that index number 23, the 1994 Alleman declaration, was attached as an exhibit to Mr. Alleman’s deposition, but Cygnus provides no indication of whether the declaration was submitted to the district court in connection with any filings. Because this court did not consider the 1994 Alleman declaration in conjunction with any of the legal issues raised on this appeal, the motion to strike is deemed moot.
Cygnus argues that index numbers 25, 111, and 112 were submitted to the district court in conjunction with a filing on May 4, 2007. After supplemental briefing, this court is satisfied that those three documents were included as attachments to that filing. The motion to strike them is therefore denied. As we noted earlier, however, those documents were presented to the district court after all the briefing on the appealed issues was complete. Therefore, while the documents are part of the record, this court has not considered them in conjunction with any of the appealed issues.
Finally, AT & T has moved to strike various portions of Cygnus’s reply brief that make accusations against AT
&
T and its counsel, such as “AT & T is not telling the truth,” “AT
&
T lied to the court ... It was a lie to state that the 386 system was commercially used,” and “AT & T suborned false testimony, a crime. The case should be remanded to the district court to refer the crime to the appropriate authorities for investigation.” This court does not condone
ad hominem
attacks. Typically, however, such attacks do more harm than good to the party that launches them. At
Each party shall bear its own costs for this appeal.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We recognize that the result would be different if the various actions had not been consolidated in an MDL proceeding and one of the actions had gone to judgment before the others, resulting in a judgment adverse to the plaintiff. In that setting, absent special circumstances, the plaintiffs failure to appeal the first judgment could result in the application of collateral estoppel against it in each of the other cases. See 18A Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice & Procedure § 4433, at 71 (3d ed.2002) ("preclusion cannot be defeated by electing to forgo an available opportunity to appeal"). However, that is not the case before us. Because the consolidated MDL proceeding was treated as a single mul-ti-defendant action with respect to the common issues, we think it proper to treat it as a single action for purposes of the collateral estoppel analysis as well.
. The following pages of Mr. Alleman’s 2006 deposition were cited in conjunction with the section 102(b) motion in the district court: pages 32-33, 39-40, 52, 54-56, 68, 79, 91-122, 140, 145, 148, 173-74, 180-81, 197-98, 200, and 203-04. In its opening brief against AT & T, Cygnus cites pages 62-63, 148-50, 154, 156, 164, 172, 181, 192-94, 198-99, 201-02, and 238. In its opening brief against the Telesys defendants, Cygnus cites pages 74-75, 83, 141, 148-50, 154-56, 164, 171-73, 183, 191-92, 194, 197-202, 235, and 238. Thus, the only pages that Cygnus relies on that were before the district court are deposition pages 148, 173, 181, and 197-98.
. The district court entered summary judgment of noninfringement with respect to only some of the Telesys defendants: United World Telecom, World Link, Inc., Americom, and A.M.S. Voicecom, Inc.
. In the email exchange, AT & T also claimed, by way of explaining why some of the duplication may have occurred, that it was not provided with a clear index of what materials Cygnus had already included in the index.
. The relevant AT & T index numbers are numbers 115 (Declaration of Gregory Wood, dated Sept. 29, 2006); 352 (Order Granting Defendant’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the Pleadings, dated Feb. 10, 2005); 384 (Second Amended Complaint, dated March 14, 2005); 401 (Declaration of Gregory Wood, dated April 4, 2005); 530 (Order Granting Defendant's Second Motion for Judgment, dated November 29, 2005); 681 (Declaration of Gregory Wood, dated Oct. 27, 2006); 746 (Objections and Request to Strike Declaration of James Alleman).
. AT & T initially requested striking index number 34, but it withdrew that motion in its reply brief.
