MEMORANDUM OPINION
This patent infringement action is again before the Court following a jury’s verdict of wilful literal infringement. 1 Two damages questions are addressed here: (i) whether the patentee, based on the facts of this case, should be awarded enhanced damages in addition to the reasonable royalty already awarded by the jury, and (ii) whether the Court’s earlier laches finding, which truncated the period for which the patentee could recover damаges, should be vacated in light of the jury’s finding that the infringer wilfully infringed the patent, i.e., that the infringer acted inequitably. For the reasons that follow, both questions must be answered in the negative.
I
Plaintiff Odetics, Inc. is the owner of United States Letters Patent No. 4,779,151, issued on October 18, 1988. The ’151 patent teaches a system for transporting cassette tapes from a storage library to a tape player. By way of example, the preferred embodiment сontains an octagonal housing (often referred to as a silo) inside of which are seven columns of tapes and one column of tape drives, or tape players. Within this housing is a robotic arm that retrieves the tapes from their storage bins and places them into the tape drives. Claims 9 and 14 of the ’151, the claims-in-suit, describe a “rotary means” that (i) allows a cassette to be loaded from outside the library, for example by a human operator, and (ii) then rotates to allow the cassette to be accessed by the robotic manipulator located inside the silo.
Storage Technology Corp. (“STK”) manufactures and sells certain library systems that Odetics alleged infringed the T51 pat *802 ent. STK’s systems are used to store and play computer data tapes. The accused STK systems contain “pass-thru ports,” devices that connect multiplе libraries or silos to each other so that tapes can be passed from one silo to another. Specifically, the tapes are placed in the pass-thru port in one library, and the pass-thru port then translates and rotates to deliver the tape to a second, adjacent library.
Odetics filed this patent infringement action seeking damages from the date the ’151 patent issued to the present. The crux оf Odetics’s infringement allegation was that the rotary means element of claims 9 and 14 read on STK’s pass-thru ports. Early in the litigation, STK filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground of laches. This Court found that Odetics had unreasonably and inexcusably delayed in filing this action, and therefore granted the motion. Accordingly, Odetics was precluded from recovering damages for any infringement occurring pri- or to June 29, 1995, the date this action was filed.
See Odetics,
Therеafter, the case was tried twice. The first jury found that STK’s accused devices did not infringe the ’151 patent. Odetics appealed this finding, but elected not to appeal the adverse laches determination; STK, for its part, appealed only one aspect of the laches determination, namely the Court’s ruling that the finding of laches did not preclude Odetics from obtaining an injunction with respect to infringing systems sold during the laches рeriod, that is, sold prior to the filing of the complaint.
2
On appeal, the Federal Circuit vacated the jury’s verdict on the ground that this Court’s original claim construction was erroneous.
See Odetics,
Given this verdict, and specifically the finding of wilfulness, Odetics has made two post-verdict motions that are at issue here. 4 First, it has moved for an award of enhanced damages pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 284. Second, it has moved the Court to reconsider its prior laches ruling in light of the jury’s conclusion that STK wilfully infringed the ’151 patent. Each of these motions has been argued fully, both orally and in writing, and thus each is now ripe for disposition.
II
A patentee is entitled to up to treble damages upon a finding of wilfulness.
See
35 U.S.C. § 284;
Read Corp. v. Portec, Inc.,
The Federal Circuit has established a nine-factor test for determining whether enhanced damages are warranted, and if so, in what amount.
See Read,
1. Whether the infringer deliberately copied the invention
Odetics has never alleged that STK copied the invention claimed in the T51 patent.
2. Whether the infringer investigated the scope of the patent and formed a good-faith belief that it was invalid or not infringed
The jury’s finding of wilfulness mandates a conclusion that STK did not have a good-faith belief in noninfringement.
See Jurgens,
3. The infringer’s behavior as a party to the litigation
There is no basis in the record for concluding that STK’s conduct was either unеthical or inappropriate at any point during this litigation.
4. The infringer’s size and financial condition
Odetics has submitted a newspaper article that indicates (i) that STK’s stock, which was trading at about seventy-five dollars, dropped only six cents the day after the jury’s verdict, and (ii) that, according to an industry analyst, even treble damages would cause only a five- to fifteen-cent drop in STK’s share price. These facts suggest that an enhanced damages award would not signifiсantly jeopardize STK’s financial well-being.
5. The closeness of the case
Here, the case was certainly a close one; the jury just as easily could have come back *804 with a verdict of noninfringement based on the evidence it heard. 7 In this regard, it is worth noting that Odetics’s motions for summary judgment of infringement and for judgment as a matter of law were denied.
6. The duration of the infringer’s conduct
Although the damages period dates back only to 1995, the infringement began in 1989. STK’s unlawful conduct, then, spanned almost ten years; however, because Odetics was guilty of laches for a significant part of that period, the duration of the infringement does not weigh as heavily against STK as it otherwise might.
7. Remedial action by the infringer
STK did not take any remedial action once it was notified of the allegation of infringement.
8. The infringer’s motivation for harm
There is no evidence that STK sought to harm Odetics; indeed, the inventor of the rotary means claimed in the ’151 patent admitted that STK and Odetics do not compete with each other.
9. Whether the infringer attempted to conceal its infringement
STK widely publicized the accused devices. Even Odeties’s Vice President of Corporate Development acknowledged that he knew of the STK products shortly after they were introduced to the market.
In sum, the following factors weigh in STK’s favor: (i) there was no allegation of copying; (ii) STK had a good-faith belief of invalidity; (iii) STK engaged in no litigation misconduct; (iv) the case was close; (v) there was no motivation on STK’s рart to harm Odetics; and (vi) there was no attempt to conceal the infringement. And the following factors weigh in Odeties’s favor: (i) according to the jury’s finding of wilfulness, STK had not formed a good-faith belief that it did not infringe the ’151 patent; (ii) STK appears to be in strong financial condition; and (iii) STK took no remedial action. Finally, there is a one factor that is neutral, namely the duration of the infringement.
It is evident that most of these factors weigh in STK’s favоr. Of course, “a district court’s assessment of the propriety and amount of enhanced damages is necessarily qualitative, not quantitative.”
Applied Med. Resources Corp. v. United States Surgical Corp.,
Accordingly, Odetics’s motion for enhanced damages must be denied.
Ill
In concluding that Odetics was guilty of laches, the Court necessarily found that Odetics had engaged in inequitable conduct.
See Odetics,
A. Procedural Bar
STK’s motion for summary judgment on laches was granted on December 20,1995. When the first jury returned its verdict on February 1, 1996, the laches ruling merged into the final judgment and became appeal-able.
See Glaros v. H.H. Robertson Co.,
In any event, assuming there is no waiver, Odetics’s argument falls short on substantive grounds, as well.
B. Substantive Bar
It is well settled that “a patentee may be able to preclude application of the laches
*806
defense with proof that the accused infringer was itself guilty of misdeeds towards the patentee.”
A.C. Aukerman Co. v. R.L. Chaides Constr. Co.,
A mere showing of inequitable conduct on the part of the infringer, however, does not suffice to negate the effect of laches. Instead, the patentee must prove that “the infringer has engaged in
particularly egregious
conduct [that] would change the equities
significantly
in plaintiffs favor.”
Aukerman,
Instead, the Court must compare the relative quality of the parties’ conduct to determine whether the scales of equity tip “significantly in plaintiffs favor.”
Aukerman,
Appropriate Orders will issue.
Notes
. For other decisions chronicling this litigation, see
Odetics, Inc. v. Storage Tech. Corp.,
. This latter issue was subsequently reargued by the parties in the district court and resolved in STK's favor.
See Odetics,
. The facts supporting the wilfulness finding are eаsily summarized: First, STK admitted that it knew of the ’151 patent within months of its issuance. Second, it did not produce a competent opinion of counsel at trial; instead, the sole testimony it offered to rebut the wilfulness allegation was that of the engineer who reviewed the '151 patent in 1992 and concluded that its rotary means limitation did not read on the pass-thru port. In finding wilful infringement, the jury implicitly rejected this testimony.
Odetics also alleged that Visa International and Crestar Bank, customers of STK and users of the pass-thru ports, infringed the '151 patent. The second jury concluded that Visa and Crestar also infringed, but that their infringement was not wilful. The jury awarded no damages for Visa’s and Crestar's use of the infringing devices.
. Both parties filed other posttrial motions as well: STK filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law and an alternative motion for a new trial on the issue of infringement, and these motions were originаlly denied. See Order, Odetics v. Storage Tech. Corp., No. 95-881 (E.D.Va. May 1, 1998) (hereinafter “May 1, 1998, Order”). Since that denial, the Court has taken under reconsideration the JMOL motion. See Order, Odetics v. Storage Tech. Corp., No. 95-881 (E.D.Va. July 10, 1998). STK also filed a motion for a new trial on damages, or in the alternative for a remittitur, which was denied. See May 1, 1998, Order. Finally, Odetics's filed a motion for attorney's fees, which was denied, and a motion for prejudgment interest, which was granted. See id.
. Odetics seeks double damages for the period from June 29, 1995, the first date for which it could recover damages for infringement, until February 1, 1996, the date of the first jury's verdict; and treble damages for the period from *803 June 25, 1997, the date of the Federal Circuit’s decision, until March 27, 1998, the date of the second jury’s verdict. (The Court has previously excluded from the wilfulness calculus the period from February 1, 1996, until June 25, 1997, given that the first jury’s verdict necessarily provided STK with the basis for a good-faith belief, during this period, that it did not infringe the '151 patent.) Odetics thus asks for enhanced damages of approximately $52 million.
. Because the first jury concluded that there was no infringement, it never reached the invalidity question. Moreover, the second jury did not hear any invalidity evidence, and thus the matter was never decided, given that the Federal Circuit remanded the case solely for a determination of infringement vel non.
See Odetics,
. Odetics suggests that the fact that the jury deliberated for only three or four hours somehow indicates that the case was not a close one. This is not necessarily so; the jury could have found the case very close, but also could have decided in relatively quick time that the evidence tipped, ever so slightly, in Odetics's favor. Therefore, no confident inference can be drawn from the length of thе jury’s deliberations.
. That the jury found that the infringement was wilful does not alter this conclusion: The jury's finding addressed STK's conduct during the infringement period, not its state of mind during the litigation. Thus, a finding of wilful infringement is not inconsistent with a finding that a defendant's challenge at trial to the existence vel non of infringement was made in good faith.
. It is worth noting that, even if STK were found not to have “mount[ed] a good faith and substantial challenge to the existence of infringement,"
Paper Converting Mach.,
. By contrast, the Court’s earlier ruling that a finding of laches did not foreclose the issuance of an injunction with respect to laches-period machines did not become law of the case because STK appealed that ruling and the Federal Circuit declined to address STK’s appeal.
See Odetics,
. See id. ("Gatlinburg did not raise or challenge the back-rent decision in its first appeal to this court, when it had the opportunity to do so and when it did attack other portions of the damages award. Thus the district court's decision became the law of the case.”).
.
But see Ramos,
Odetics's citation to W.L.
Gore & Assocs. v. IMPRA, Inc.,
. Contrary to Odetics's argument, the result reached here does not contradict the jury’s finding of wilfulness.
See Jurgens,
