Lead Opinion
ePlus, Inc. (“ePlus”), the assignee of U.S. Patent Nos. 6,023,683 (the “'683 patent”) and 6,505,172 (the “'172 patent”), sued Lawson Software, Inc. (“Lawson”) for infringement. The district court found two of the asserted system claims and three of the asserted method claims not invalid, and a jury found that Lawson infringed those claims. In an earlier appeal, we reversed in part on the ground that the system claims were invalid and that two of the asserted method claims were not infringed. We affirmed only the infringement verdict as to one method claim— claim 26 — of the '683 patent. We remanded to the district court to make necessary modifications to the injunction.
On remand, the district court modified the injunction in one respect and found Lawson in civil contempt for violating the injunction. Lawson appealed both the injunction and contempt order. During the pendency of Lawson’s appeals, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) completed a reexamination of the '683 patent and determined that claim 26 was invalid. In a separate appeal, we affirmed the PTO’s invalidity determination, and the PTO cancelled claim 26. We now vacate the injunction and contempt order because both were based on claim 26, which the PTO has now cancelled.
Background
This case raises two issues. The first is whether an injunction can continue after the PTO has cancelled the only claim on which the injunction was based. The second is whether civil contempt remedies based on the violation of an injunction are appropriate when the injunction has been overturned on direct appeal.
I
ePlus owns the '172 patent and the '683 patent, which both relate to methods and systems for electronic sourcing. See ePlus, Inc. v. Lawson Software, Inc.,
In 2009, ePlus sued Lawson for infringement of the '683 patent and the '172 patent in the Eastern District of Virginia.
Given the modular nature of Lawson’s products, ePlus asserted different patent claims against five distinct configurations of software modules (“Configurations 1-5”). With respect to the asserted claims of the '683 patent and the '172 patent, the jury found that three of the five accused configurations infringed. Configurations 3 and 5 were found to infringe two system claims (claim 1 of the '172 patent and claim 3 of the '683 patent) and three method claims (claims 26, 28, and 29 of the '683 patent). Configuration 2 was found to infringe one system claim (claim 1 of the '172 patent). Configurations 1 and 4 were found not to infringe any of the claims asserted against them.
Pursuant to the jury verdicts, the district court permanently enjoined Lawson from
directly or indirectly making, using, offering to sell, or selling within the United States or importing into the United States any of the [adjudged infringing] product configurations and/or installation, implementation, design, configuration, consulting, upgrade, maintenance, and support and training and other related and associated services and any colorable variations thereof (the “Infringing Products and Services”).
J.A. 4263.' The court defined the “Infringing Products and Services” to include the three software configurations (Configurations 2, 3, and 5) adjudged infringing by the jury. The court also enjoined Lawson from “[c]irculating, publishing or disseminating within the United States any literature or information that encourages the use, sale or importation of any of the Infringing Products and Services,” and from “[ajiding and abetting, actively inducing, or in any way contributing to the making, use, sale or importation of any of the Infringing Products and Services.” J.A. 4264. Lawson appealed.
On this first appeal, we determined that the two asserted system claims (claim 1 of the '172 patent and claim 3 of the '683 patent) were invalid, and that two of the three asserted method claims (claims 28 and 29 of the '683 patent) were not infringed. We affirmed only the infringement finding as to method claim 26. Only Con
After our ruling, the district court ordered the parties to file statements of position on the effect of our decision on the injunction. These were filed before Lawson’s Rule 60(b) motion discussed below. Most importantly, Lawson challenged the very provisions of the injunction that led to the contempt sanctions sought by ePlus— namely, the bar against sales of particular software products. Originally, these provisions concerning software sales were supported by the jury’s findings of infringement of the system claims (claim 1 of the '172 patent and claim 3 of the '683 patent).
The district court agreed with ePlus’s position and ordered that the injunction be “modified by deleting from its scope the product ... colloquially known as ‘Configuration 2,’” and “remain in effect in all other respects.” J.A. 1.
On remand, in addition to reconsidering the injunction, the district court also instituted contempt proceedings. Following the jury verdicts, Lawson had decommissioned .and stopped selling products with RSS, the user interface module for Core Procurement, the basic building block of Lawson’s system. Lawson had also redesigned its software in two pertinent respects. First, it redesigned Configurations 3 and 5 by developing a new module, Requisition Center' (“RQC”) to replace the
ePlus alleged that Lawson was in contempt for violating the injunction with respect to the redesigned software, arguing that the changes did not make the software more than colorably different from Configurations 3 and 5, and that the redesigned software infringed claim 26. Lawson argued that it was not violating the injunction because the redesigned software was more than colorably different from the originally accused software and that ePlus could not show that the redesigned software continued to infringe claim 26. The court held Lawson in contempt for violating the injunction, finding that the redesigned products were no more than color-ably different and infringed. The court ordered Lawson to pay a compensatory fine of $18,167,950 and coercive daily fines of $62,362 until it could show compliance with the injunction. It declined to award enhanced damages or attorneys’ fees. Lawson appealed the district court’s modified injunction and contempt order. We stayed the accumulation of fines during the pendency of the appeals.
While Lawson’s appeals were pending, in another case, we affirmed the PTO’s reexamination decision invalidating claim 26 of the '683 patent. In re ePlus, Inc.,
We have jurisdiction over the appeal of the injunction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) & (c)(1) and over the appeal of the contempt order pursuant to 28 U.S.C § 1291. We review a grant, denial, or modification of an injunction in a patent case for abuse of discretion. Int’l Rectifier Corp. v. Samsung Elecs. Co.,
DiscussioN
I. Injunction
The first question is whether the district court’s modified injunction against Lawson must be set aside now that the PTO has cancelled the patent claim on which it is based. It is well established that an injunction must be set aside when the legal basis for it has ceased to exist. In Pennsylvania v. Wheeling & Belmont Bridge Co.,
“The principles of the Wheeling Bridge case have repeatedly been followed” by the Supreme Court as well as “by lower federal and state courts.” Sys. Fed’n No. 91, Ry. Emps.’ Dep’t v. Wright,
Those principles reflect the fact that “[a] continuing decree of injunction directed to events to come is subject always to adaptation as events may shape the need.... [A] court does not abdicate its power to revoke or modify its mandate, if satisfied that what it has been doing has been turned through changing circumstances into an instrument of wrong.” United States v. Swift & Co.,
Our court has applied these principles to an injunction barring infringement of patents later found to be invalid. Mendenhall v. Barber-Greene Co.,
Under these authorities, there is no longer any legal basis to enjoin Lawson’s
II. Civil Contempt Remedies
The second question is whether the civil contempt sanctions should be set aside. It is well established that “[vjiola-tions of an order are punishable as criminal contempt even though the order is set aside on appeal ... or though the basic action has become moot.” United States v. United Mine Workers of Am.,
However, the district court found Lawson in civil, not criminal, contempt. It awarded “compensation” to ePlus for economic injury during the period that the injunction was in effect, based on the Supreme Court decision in Leman v. Krentler-Arnold Hinge Last Co.,
It does not follow, of course, that simply because a defendant may be punished for criminal contempt for disobedience of an order later set aside on appeal, that the plaintiff in the action may profit by way of a fine imposed in a simultaneous proceeding for civil contempt based upon a violation of the same order.
Id. at 294-95,
The Supreme Court has specifically applied this rule to set aside civil contempt sanctions imposed for violating an injunction based on patents found to be invalid on appeal of the (non-final) injunction. Worden, 121 U.S at 26,
This case does not require us to decide whether civil contempt sanctions would survive if the injunction had been final at the time the district court imposed civil contempt sanctions.
We held in Fresenius that even if this court has rejected an invalidity defense to infringement, an “intervening decision invalidating the patents unquestionably applies” as long as “the judgment in [the present] litigation is not final.” Id. at 1344; see also Mojfitt,
The injunction enjoined “making, ... offering to sell, or selling” the “Infringing [software] Products_” J.A. 4263-64. But it did not tie the sales provision to any particular claims, nor, contrary to the dissent, did the district court’s opinions do so.
But the system claims were held invalid. ePlus has argued that the sales and manufacturing provisions of the injunction could be based on induced infringement by Lawson of method claim 26, the one claim of the patent that we held infringed in the original appeal. On remand, and again on
Once the system claims were invalidated, there remained a substantial question of whether an injunction against sales and manufacturing could be justified on a theory of inducement.
As the Supreme Court explained in the analogous context of copyright infringement, to “overcome! ] the law’s reluctance to find liability when a defendant merely sells a commercial product suitable for some lawful use,” induced infringement requires active steps to encourage direct infringement and an “affirmative intent that the product be used to infringe.” Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd.,
Not surprisingly, our opinion in ePlus I did not resolve whether the sales and manufacturing injunction could be based on method claim 26. With respect to claim 26, we stated that Lawson’s customers infringe by performing all the steps of claim 26, that Lawson directly infringes claim 26, and that Lawson induced infringement. But we did not hold that sales induced infringement.
Thus, because the propriety of the injunction against sales and manufacturing was still an issue after the first appeal, there had not been “a final decree ... that finally adjudicates upon the entire merits, leaving nothing further to be done except the execution of it.” John Simmons Co.,
ePlus asserts that Lawson viewed the injunction as final because it filed a Rule 60(b) motion asking the district court to modify or dissolve the modified injunction. The filing of a Rule 60(b) motion under such circumstances is not unusual. Filing a Rule 60(b) motion did not prevent Lawson from appealing the modified injunction in addition to appealing the denial of the Rule 60(b) motion. See Stone v. Immigration & Naturalization Serv.,
We conclude that the compensatory award for the violation of the injunction must be set aside in light of the cancellation of claim 26. Given our disposition, we need not reach the question of whether Lawson’s redesigned products are more than colorably different from the original accused products and whether the redesigned products infringe.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s injunction and contempt orders are vacated. The case is remanded with instructions to dismiss.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. ePlus also alleged infringement of certain claims of U.S. Patent No. 6,055,516. The jury found none of those claims infringed, and ePlus did not appeal that aspect of the jury verdict.
.In sustaining the jury verdict, the district court relied on the determination that "Lawson actively induces its customers’ direct infringement by selling and offering to sell the infringing systems with the intent that its customers use those systems in an infringing manner.” ePlus, Inc. v. Lawson Software, Inc., No. 3:09-cv-620,
. We recognized that "[i]n addition to selling procurement software, Lawson provides services to customers who purchase its products. These services may include installation and maintenance of the products.” ePlus I,
. We relied on "evidence that Lawson installed, maintained, demonstrated and managed the infringing systems for its customers” to conclude that a reasonable jury could "infer that Lawson performed the steps of claim 26” and "induced its customers to infringe claim 26.” Id.
. The district court also ordered coercive sanctions. We stayed these sanctions pending the resolution of this appeal. There is no question that ePlus is not entitled to seek coercive sanctions now that the injunction has been vacated.
. Curiously, the dissent now finds Worden inapplicable to this situation, Diss. Op. at 1368 n. 5, after previously urging in Fresenius that Worden required the reversal of contempt sanctions in such situations. Judge O’Malley, in dissenting from the denial of en banc rehearing in Fresenius, stated: “[Worden] merely stands for the proposition that the right to fines for violation of a preliminary injunction is founded on that injunction which in turn is predicated on the validity of the patent.” Fresenius USA, Inc. v. Baxter Int’l, Inc.,
. ePlus claims that some cases it cites have reached contrary results, but those cases involve situations where the basis for the injunction was eliminated prospectively only, see, e.g., Klett v. Pim,
."The general rule is that whether a contempt judgment survives the avoidance of an underlying order depends on the nature of the contempt decree. If the contempt is criminal it stands; if it is civil it falls.” Latrobe Steel Co. v. United Steelworkers of Am.,
. The Supreme Court denied the petition for certiorari on May 19, 2014. Baxter, Int'l, Inc. v. Fresenius USA, Inc., - U.S. -,
. See, e.g., Maggio v. Zeitz,
. The dissent quotes from the district court’s opinion denying judgment as a matter of law to argue that selling the infringing systems would be an infringement of method claim 26 specifically. Diss. Op. at 1363 n. 2 (quoting ePlus, Inc. v. Lawson Software, Inc.,
The jury heard and received substantial evidence to support a finding of indirect infringement of the claims, on either an inducement or contributory infringement basis. Evidence demonstrated that Lawson actively induces its customers' direct infringement by selling and offering to sell the infringing systems with the intent that its customers use those systems in an infringing manner. Testimony elicited during the trial and the documentary evidence tended to prove also that Lawson installs the infringing systems on its customers' systems, configures and implements the systems, provides_ a wide-range of technical support and service, and provides instructions and training to its customers on how to use the systems in an infringing manner.
ePlus,
. The dissent suggests we affirmed a determination of contributory infringement of the method claims. Diss. Op. at 1364-65. In fact, the panel opinion in ePlus I did not address contributory infringement. This is unsurprising, since contributory infringement of the method claims was barely mentioned in the parties’ briefs in that appeal. Significantly, the panel did not even mention contributory infringement when it described ePlus’ theories of infringement of the method claims. See ePlus I,
. The entirety of our discussion is as follows:
Moreover, in our view, the record contains substantial evidence to show that Lawson itself infringes claim 26. In particular, there is evidence that Lawson installed, maintained, demonstrated, and managed the infringing systems for its customers. The evidence includes course catalogs and webinar presentations offered by Lawson to its customers. ePlus also offered testimony at trial to the effect that Lawson’s professional services include developing, installing, and testing “up to and including bringing a system live” for its customers. J.A. 1941. ePlus also provided the jury with evidence that the live testing phase included performing actual procurements using Lawson's systems. All of this circumstantial evidence permits a reasonable jury to infer that Lawson performed the steps of claim 26. Finally, we have reviewed the record and are satisfied that it contains sufficient evidence of Lawson’s intent and knowledge to allow a reasonable jury to conclude that Lawson induced its customers to infringe claim 26. Thus, we affirm the district court’s denial of JMOL of non-infringement with respect to the jury's verdict of direct and induced infringement of claim 26.
ePlus I,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I agree that, once this Court affirmed the PTO’s cancellation of claim 26 of the '683 patent, an ongoing injunction barring infringement of that patent could no longer stand and must be vacated prospectively. That conclusion comes easily; as the majority notes, even Appellant’s counsel conceded the point during oral argument. Maj. Op. at 1355. The more difficult question is whether Appellees are relieved of all penalties for having violated the injunction during the four years it was in place before the PTO’s cancellation was affirmed.
On this second question, the majority concludes that “[tjhis case does not require us to decide whether civil contempt sanctions would survive if the injunction had been final at the time the district court imposed civil contempt sanctions,” Maj. Op. at 1358, because, under Fresenius USA, Inc. v. Baxter International, Inc.,
I
I begin by addressing the majority’s revisions to the originally-issued opinion in this case, made in response to legitimate criticisms of the panel opinion set forth in the Petition for Panel Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc. Rather than correct the legal errors in its original decision, the majority now attempts to justify that decision by rewriting the record and recharac-terizing our decision in ePlus, Inc. v. Lawson Software, Inc.,
In ePlus I, we faced an appeal from a district court judgment which found system claim 3 and method claims 26, 28, and 29 of U.S. Patent No. 6,023,683 (“the '683 patent”), as well as system claim 1 of U.S. Patent No. 6,505,172 (“the '172 patent”), valid and infringed. ePlus, Inc. v. Lawson Software, Inc., No. 3:09-cv-620,
We concluded that the system claims were invalid as indefinite, and reversed the district court’s denial of judgment as a matter of law for noninfringement of claims 28 and 29 of the '683 patent. Id. at 523. With respect to infringement of claim 26, however, we held that “there remains no serious dispute that Lawson’s customers infringe claim 26.” Id. at 520. We then stated that “[flinally, we have reviewed the record and are satisfied that it contains sufficient evidence of Lawson’s intent and knowledge to allow a reasonable jury to conclude that Lawson induced its customers to infringe claim 26.” Id. at 521. We were also unpersuaded by Lawson’s argument that there was insufficient evidence that Lawson was a contributory infringer.
Indeed, at the point at which we remanded to the district court, it is hard to conceive how “the propriety of the injunction against sales and manufacturing was still an issue_” Maj. Op. at 1361. We had affirmed that substantial evidence supported the district court’s conclusion that Lawson induced infringement of claim 26 through sales of certain accused configurations. We did not vacate the district court’s injunction, request that the district court “revise or reconsider the injunction,” as we did in Fresenius USA, Inc. v. Baxter International, Inc.,
It is therefore unsurprising that the district court, on remand, found that we “affirmed the judgment of direct and indirect infringement of [cjlaim 26, rejected Lawson’s challenge to the breadth of the injunction, and held that ‘[t]o the extent that we have not addressed any of the parties’ arguments on appeal or cross-appeal, we have determined them to be unpersuasive,’ ” thus concluding that “it is rather clear that the Court of Appeals affirmed the decision to issue the injunction.” ePlus,
Although the majority cites to extensive case law regarding inducement and the requirements for inducement as applied to sales of “an apparatus capable of performing the method,” Maj. Op. at 1360, that case law is inapposite' — -the district court and the jury already concluded that Lawson induced infringement through sales of the accused configurations, and we affirmed the district court’s conclusion that substantial evidence supported that result.
B
I turn now to whether Fresenius II mandates the decision in this case. The majority claims that it “goes no further than we did in Fresenius in deciding this case,” Maj. Op. at 1358, but the facts of Fresenius II do not bear the weight allotted them by the majority. In Fresenius II, a panel of this court held that “cancellation of claims during reexamination would be binding in concurrent litigation,” and, while “cancellation of a patent’s claims cannot be used to reopen a final damages judgment ending a suit based on those claims,” there can be “no final judgment binding the parties” “where the scope of relief remains to be determined.”
In the initial district court litigation between Fresenius and Baxter, Fresenius brought suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the claims of three patents were “invalid and not infringed by Fresenius’s hemodialysis machines.” Fresenius I,
In Fresenius I, we reversed the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law for all but six claims of one of Baxter’s patents. Id. at 1304. For those six claims, we held that Fresenius failed to prove invalidity. Id. We remanded to the district court with the following instruction: “[W]e vacate the injunction and remand so that the court may revise or reconsider the injunction in light of the fact that only claims 26-31 of the '434 patent remain valid and infringed. Finally, we vacate the royalty award entered by the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.” Id.
On remand, Fresenius argued that no injunction should issue, the post-verdict ongoing royalty amount was unreasonable, and it should receive a “new trial for pre-verdict damages for infringement of [U.S. Patent No. 5,247,434].” Fresenius II,
There are crucial differences between the facts in the present appeal and the facts in Fresenius II. First, although Fre-senius failed to appeal the pre-verdict damages judgment from the district court, it did appeal the validity of all relevant claims-at-issue, and did move for a new trial on pre-verdict damages on remand premised on the “further proceedings” language in our remand instruction. In the present appeal, Lawson never appealed the validity of claim 26 of the '683 patent and never sought to press the issue again, either before the trial court or this one. The judgment that claim 26 of the '683 patent was valid became final when the district court entered final judgment and Lawson chose not to appeal that judgment to this court. While the PTO did find claim 26 of the '683 patent to be invalid through ex parte reexamination proceedings, and we affirmed that decision in In re ePlus, Inc.,
Second, the remand instructions in ePlus I and Fresenius I were different in important, material respects. In Freseni-us I, we vacated the injunction and the post-verdict royalty awards, instructed the district court to “revise or reconsider” the injunction, and remanded “for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.” Fresenius I,
The Fresenius II majority concluded that the remand instruction in Qualcomm was for “specific, immediate relief for a party,” while it found the remand instruction in Fresenius I more open-ended — “for further proceedings.” Id. The remand instruction in ePlus I, like that in Qual-comm, did contemplate “specific, immediate-relief for a party” — Configuration 2 should be removed from the scope of the injunction, but the injunction remains in force subject only to the district court’s continuing equitable power over it. And, the remand instruction in ePlus I noticeably does not include an order for the district court to undertake “further proceedings.” Fresenius I,
Finally, the nature of the remedies at issue on appeal distinguishes the two cases. In Fresenius II, the majority determined that both pre-verdict and post-verdict damages would be vacated in light of the PTO reexamination results because the ' majority said the general scope of monetary remedies was not yet final. Even if true in Fresenius, that is not the case here. As noted, I agree with the majority that the injunction should be vacated prospectively from the date when In re ePlus mandated, and that any coercive civil remedies should be vacated because it would be inappropriate to force Lawson to comply with an injunction that is no longer enforceable. As the majority correctly states, an injunction is a “continuing decree” that must not be enforced prospectively if the right underlying the decree is abrogated. Maj. Op. at 1354-56 (quoting Pennsylvania. v. Wheeling & Belmont Bridge Co.,
Lawson’s conduct giving rise to the contempt order occurred while the injunction, with regards to Configurations 3 and 5, remained valid under ePlus I. Although we remanded to allow the district court to use its inherent equitable powers to remove Configuration 2 from the scope of the injunction, we retained the jury’s infringement finding with regards to claim 26 of the '683 patent, Lawson did not appeal the validity of claim 26, and we did not vacate the injunction. In a contempt proceeding, the putative contemnor may not challenge the correctness of the underlying order or attack the validity of the underlying basis for an injunction unless the court issuing the injunction had no jurisdiction to do so.
Although the majority assures us that “[w]e go no further than we did in Fresen-ius in deciding this case,” Maj. Op. at 1358, the facts of the instant appeal present a different picture than those recited in the majority opinion and show substantial, important distinctions from the facts in Fre-senius II. For these reasons, I believe that the majority incorrectly holds that Fresen-ius II requires that we vacate the compensatory contempt award in light of In re ePlus.
II
Finally, if the majority is correct that Fresenius II requires us to vacate the compensatory contempt award,
The majority’s approach is contrary to the well-established law of finality when the merits of an issue are conclusively decided. Fresenius II Denial of En Banc,
The majority opinion also creates uncertainty for any future compensatory contempt awards due to the unique nature of injunctions, a point not .contemplated in Fresenius II. District courts always retain the equitable power to revise injunctions prospectively in light of changed circumstance. Does this mean that, where an injunction is entered, the “scope of relief remains to be determined” in perpetuity? Maj. Op. at 1358. Even if we had affirmed all grounds in ePlus I and did not remand, Lawson could still have filed a Rule 60(b) motion and argued that, as long as the contempt proceedings were on appeal the “scope of relief remains to be determined” under the district court’s continuing power over the injunction. Would we have to vacate every civil contempt award where a
The majority decision today exacerbates the circuit split between the Federal Circuit and the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (“D.C. Circuit”). As noted, the Fresenius II majority distinguished Qualcomm by arguing that the D.C. Circuit ordered “specific” relief on remand, while our order for remand in Fresenius I was not sufficiently specific. Fresenius II,
Finally, as I noted in my dissent from denial of rehearing en banc in Fresenius II Denial ofEn Banc,
Despite the very liberal view of finality we employed in that context, we continue to declare that we must employ the stingiest view of that concept when deciding at what point parties may rely on litigated determinations of their rights. This chasm between the sweeping rule laid down both in Fresenius II and here and the one the court established in Bosch is confusing. Notably, finality often may be applied less strictly for preclusion purposes than for purposes of appeal, not more so. See Miller Brewing Co. v. Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co.,
I see no way to reconcile the liberal view of finality for appeal purposes we adopted in Bosch with today’s view that finality almost never exists for preclusion purposes. I dissent from the majority’s decision. I would proceed to consider the merits of Lawson’s appeal from the trial court’s civil contempt findings.
. While Lawson contends it did not violate the district court’s injunction, because the majority does not reach that question, neither do I. The current record contains a district court finding that Lawson did violate the injunction. The question I debate with the majority is whether we can reach the merits of that finding.
. Lawson challenged "the jury’s verdict with respect to indirect infringement,” claiming that the verdict “was supported by insufficient evidence.” ePlus,
. Prior to entering the injunction, the district court excluded ePlus’s expert report regarding damages, and did not permit ePlus to present evidence of damages due to prior discovery sanctions. ePlus I,
. We stated in ePlus I that "[t]o the extent that we have not addressed any of the parties' arguments ..., we have determined them to be unpersuasive.”
. The cases the majority relies upon, such as McLean v. Central States, Southeast & Southwest Areas Pension Fund,
The majority further relies on Worden v. Searls,
. As noted, given the grounds for our decision here, I express no opinion on the merits of Lawson’s objections to the contempt findings.
. And is correct that the present appeal does not "go ... further than we did in Fresenius [J/].” Maj. Op. at 1358.
. Indeed, parties have begun reading Freseni-us II broadly, arguing that the policies and rationales underlying that decision justify reopening even admittedly final judgments to give effect to later PTO decisions. See, e.g., Versata Software, Inc. v. SAP Am., Inc., No. 2:07-cv-l 53-RSP,
