Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge LOURIE.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge O’MALLEY.
Kеurig, Inc. (“Keurig”) appeals from the decision of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware granting summary judgment that Sturm Foods, Inc. (“Sturm”) does not infringe claim 29 of Keurig’s U.S. Patent 7, 165, 488 (the “'488 patent”) and claims 6-8 of Keurig’s U.S. Patent 6,606,938 (the “'938 patent”). Keurig, Inc. v. Sturm Foods, Inc., No. 10-841,
Background
Keurig manufactures and sells single-serve coffee brewers and beverage cartridges for use in those brewers. Consumers insert a cartridge into the brewer, hot water is forced through the cartridge, and a beverage is dispensed. Keurig owns the '488 and '938 patents directed to brewers and methods of using them to make beverages. Claim 6 of the '938 patent is representative of the method claims, which are the only claims at issue:
6. A method of brewing a beverage from a beverage medium сontained in a disposable cartridge, comprising the following steps, in sequence:
(a) piercing the cartridge with a tubular outlet probe to vent the cartridge interi- or;
(b) piercing the cartridge with a tubular inlet probe;
(c) admitting heated liquid into the cartridge interior via the inlet probe for combination with the beverage mеdium to produce a beverage; and
(d) extracting the beverage from the cartridge interior via the outlet probe.
'938 patent col. 4 11. 40-50. Claims 1-21 of the '488 patent and claims 1-5 of the '938 patent, which were not asserted in the instant case, recite apparatus claims directed to brewers. Keurig also holds at least one design patent directed to its own brand of cartridges, but that patent was not asserted here. See Keurig, Inc. v. JBR, Inc., No. 11-11941,
Keurig filed suit against Sturm, alleging, inter alia, that the use of Sturm’s Grove Square cartridges in certain Keurig brewer models directly infringed method claim 29 of the '488 patent and method claims 6-8 of the '938 patent, and that Sturm induced and contributed to that infringement. Sturm asserted the affirmative defense of patent exhaustion and moved for summary judgment of noninfringement, which the district court granted. Keurig,
The district court held that the Supreme Court’s substantial embodiment test — providing that method claims are exhausted by sale of an unpatented component article if that article includes all the inventive asрects of the patented method and has no reasonable noninfringing use — did not apply to the facts of this case. Id. at *5-6. Instead, the court concluded that the exhaustion of Keurig’s patent rights had been triggered by Keurig’s initial authorized sale of a patented item that completely practiced the claimed invention, viz., the brewer. Id. The court also noted that Keurig’s method claims were not saved from exhaustion merely because a consumer could potentially use non-Keurig cartridges in a Keurig brewer in a noninfringing way. Id. at *6.
The district court then severed the remаining nonpatent issues and entered final judgment on its patent exhaustion-related decision pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b). Keurig, Inc. v. Sturm Foods, Inc., No. 10-841 (D.Del. Nov. 2, 2012), ECF No. 371. Keurig timely appealed. We accept the district court’s Rule 54(b) certification of this partial judgment and exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
Discussion
Summary judgment is appropriate if the movant “shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). We review the grant of summary judgment under the law of the regional circuit in which the district court sits, here, the Third Circuit. Lexion Med., LLC v. Northgate Techs., Inc.,
Keurig argues that the district court erred by declining to apply the substantial embodiment test articulated by the Supreme Court in Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc.,
Sturm responds that the Quanta test was formulated to address an exhaustion issue based on the sale of unpatented items and therefore is not applicable herе. Sturm argues that use of Keurig’s brewers with a non-Keurig cartridge cannot constitute infringement because Keurig’s authorized sale of those brewers, which are covered by the asserted patents, exhausted
Patent exhaustiоn is an affirmative defense to a claim of patent infringement, ExcelStor Technology, Inc. v. Papst Licensing GMBH & Co. KG,
The leading cases in which the patent exhaustion doctrine has been applied to method claims are Quanta and United States v. Univis Lens Co.,
In Quanta, the Court held that method claims for managing and synchronizing data transfers between computer components were exhausted when the patent holder licensed a manufacturer to produce and sell unpatented microprocessors and chipsets that performed the patented methods when incorporated with memory and buses in a computer system. Quanta,
The Court thus established that method claims are exhausted by an authorized sale of an item that substantially embodies the method if the item (1) has no reasonable noninfringing use and (2) includes all inventive aspects of the claimed method. Id. at 638,
But that is not the case before us, which presents an a fortiori fact situation in which the product sold by Keurig was patented. Keurig acknowledges that its brewers are commercial embodiments of the apparatus claims of the '488 and '938 patents. Appellant Br. 27-28. Keurig did not assert its cartridge patent against
To rule otherwise would allow Keurig what the Supreme Court has aptly described as an “end-run around exhaustion” by claiming methods as well as the apparatus that practices them and attempting to shield the patented apparatus from exhaustion by holding downstream purchasers of its device liable for infringement of its method claims — a tactic that the Supreme Court has explicitly admonished. Id. at 630,
We agree with the district court that a consumer’s potential use of different types of cartridges, viz., cartridges that would not infringe the claimed methods, cannot save Keurig’s method claims from exhaustion. Such an outcome would also be counter to the spirit of the doctrine of patent exhaustion because Keurig could control use of the brewers after it sold them. The claims of both the '488 patent and the '938 patent are directed to the brewers and the use of the brewers; therefore, Keurig cannot preclude an individual who purchased one of its brewers from using a non-Keurig cartridge with that brewer.
Mоreover, Keurig’s argument that patent exhaustion must be adjudicated on a claim-by-claim basis is unavailing. The Court’s patent exhaustion jurisprudence has focused on the exhaustion of the patents at issue in their entirety, rather than the exhaustion of the claims at issue on an individual bаsis. See id. at 634-35,
To permit a patentee to reserve specific claims from exhaustion would frustrate the purposes of the doctrine, one of which is to provide an efficient framework for determining when a patent right has been exhausted. If Keurig were allowed to assert its claims to methods of brewing a beverage using the subject brewers of its apparatus claims оf the same patent, the effect would be to vitiate the doctrine of patent exhaustion. The confusion that would be created by Keurig’s approach would pro
The doctrine of patent exhaustion hаs the effect of providing an efficient means for ensuring the termination of the patent right. See Univis,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court did not err in holding that Keurig’s asserted rights under its '488 and '938 patents were exhausted by the sale оf its brewer. The noninfringement judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.
AFFIRMED
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in the result.
I concur in the judgment only. I agree with the majority’s conclusion that Keurig’s asserted patent rights were exhausted by the sale of its patented brewers. Reaching this result requires application of a single princiрle: “[t]he longstanding [rule] ... that the initial authorized sale of a patented item terminates all patent rights to that item.” Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Elecs., Inc.,
