ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTIONS TO DISMISS
Plaintiffs OpenLCR.com, Inc., Sharp Corporation, and Sharp Electronics Corporation bring this action against Rates Technology, Inc. (“RTI”) seeking a declaration of noninfringement and/or unen-forceability and invalidity of various patents held by RTI. Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint also alleges attempted monopolization in violation of 15 U.S.C. § 2, and state law causes of action for intentional interference with contractual relations and prospective business advantage. The Court exercises jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1337, 1338, 1367, and 2201(a).
Currently pending before the Court are two separate motions to dismiss by RTI. The first seeks dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction, improper venue, insufficiency of process, and insufficiency of service of process pursuant to Rules 12(b)(2), (3), (4), and (5) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. RTFs second motion seeks dismissal of Plaintiffs’ antitrust and state law causes of action pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Having considered the parties’ briefs and oral arguments, and being fully advised in the premises, the Court hereby FINDS and ORDERS as follows:
Background
OpenLCR is a Colorado corporation that develops and implements a technology known as least cost routing (“LCR”) used in telephonic devices such as fax machines and telеphones. LCR automatically selects the least expensive long-distance rate each time the user makes a long-distance telephone call. Sharp Electronics Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of the multinational Sharp Corporation, is engaged in, among other things, the manufacture and sale of fax machines. Defendant RTI, a
According to allegations in the Amended Complaint, as early as 1987 one of OpenLCR’s founders participated in the invention of a technology for routing calls from a telеphone device to selected low-cost carriers. This technology, known as “Alpha-LCR,” employs algorithms, loaded into a telephonic device, which pre-deter-mine the routing of calls to selected carriers whose rate is lower for the day and time of each outgoing call. Alpha-LCR technology has been used commercially in Japan since approximately 1990. Sharp Corporation began using the technology in telephones it sold in Japan beginning in August 1992.
In October 1978, Gerald J. Weinberger, now president of RTI, received U.S.Patent No. 4,122,308 (the “’308 Patent”) broadly disclosing LCR technology-to be used with telephone devices. The ’308 Patent expired in October 1995. In August 1994, as the protection period on the ’308 Patent neared its end, Weinberger filed two more narrow patent applications on LCR technology. Although Weinberger cited the ’308 Patent technology in both applications, he did not disclose the Alpha-LCR technology to the United States Patent Office. On or about June 13, 1995, the Patent Office issued U.S.Patent No. 5,425,-085 entitled “Least Cost Routing Device For Separate Connection Into Phone Line” in the name of Weinberger and another individual as the inventors (the “’085 Patent”). On May 21, 1996; the Patent Office issued U.S.Patent No. 5,519,769 entitled “Method And System For Updating A Call Waiting Database” in the name of Weinbergеr and another individual as the inventors (the “’769 Patent”). The ’085 Patent discloses and claims a specific LCR device to be used between a telephone and the local telephone network — i.e., between the telephone and the wall jack. The ’769 Patent discloses and claims a specific method for updating, when necessary, LCR billing rate parameters in a rating device. RTI is the assignee of both the ’085 and ’769 Patents.
In October 1999, OpenLCR contracted with Sharp to develop and market facsimile machines using OpenLCR’s expanded version of the Alpha-LCR technology previously used in Japan. OpenLCR entered into a similar agreement with Casio Communications, Inc. (Casio) in January 2000. Casio intended to use OpenLCR’s Alpha-LCR technology in an upcoming line of cordless telephones and answering machines.
Shortly after the public announcements of these business relationships, RTI, through Weinberger, began communicating with OpenLCR, the Sharp entities, and Casio claiming that OpenLCR’s technology and products using that technology infringe on one or more claims of the ’085 and ’769 Patents. Plaintiffs responded to these communications by informing RTI that the OpenLCR’s technology was based on the Alpha-LCR technology that had been in use in Japan since approximately 1988, well before Weinberger filed applications for the ’085 and ’769 Patents. Plaintiffs also made numerous requests for meetings with RTI to discuss issues relating to the alleged infringement and the validity of the RTI Patents in light of the earlier Alpha-LCR technology.
RTI refused to meet with Plaintiffs to discuss the validity of the ’085 and ’769 Patents, and threatened litigation unless OpenLCR agreed to enter into a license agreement. Over an approximately six-month period, from October 1999 through March 2000, Weinberger sent at least eight demand letters and made over fifty telephone calls to OpenLCR in Colorado.
On March 24, 2000, OpenLCR brought suit in this Court against RTI seeking a declaration of noninfringement and invalidity of the ’085 and ’769 Patents. Five days later, on March 29, 2000, RTI filed a patent infringement action against OpenLCR and the Sharp parties in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. On May 5, 2000, RTI voluntarily dismissed the New York lawsuit in its entirety and then refiled the case in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Nеw York. RTI’s Amended Complaint in the Eastern District of New York alleges a single cause of action for infringement of the ’085 and ’769 Patents, and names as defendants Sharp Document & Network Systems of America, Sharp Electronics Corporation, Sharp Corporation, and Home Shopping Network, Inc.
On April 7, 2000, approximately one month before RTI dismissed and then refiled the New York lawsuit, OpenLCR, joined by the Sharp parties, filed an Amended Complaint in this action. In addition to the declaratory relief, the Amended Complaint accuses RTI of attempted monopolization of the market for LCR technology and products using that technology, intentional interference with the OpenLCR-Sharp contract, intentional interference with the OpenLCR-Casio contract, and intentional interference with prospective business advantage. The Amended Complaint alleges that RTI’s actions disrupted OpenLCR’s performance of the Sharp and Casio contracts and caused OpenLCR to suffer a loss of profits.
RTI now moves to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint for lack of personal jurisdiction, improper venue, insufficient process, and insufficient service of process, and to dismiss the Sharp parties under the “first-to-file” rule. RTI also moves to dismiss Plaintiffs’ antitrust and state law tort claims for failure to state a сlaim upon which relief can be granted. The Court shall address each motion in turn.
Analysis
A. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to Rules 12(b)(2), (3), (4) and (5), and the First-to-File Rule
1. Personal Jurisdiction
Plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing this Court’s personal jurisdiction over RTI.
See Kuenzle v. HTM Sport-Und Freizeitgerate AG,
The Federal Circuit has exclusive jurisdiction over appeals from the district courts involving claims arising under the patent laws.
See
28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1295(a), 1338(a) (West 1993). In a patent case, when analyzing personal jurisdiction for purposes of federal due process, district courts apply the law of the Federal Circuit.
See Red Wing Shoe Co. v. Hockerson-Halberstadt, Inc.,
For the first step of the analysis, the Court turns to Colorado’s long-arm statute, which establishes personal juris
The Federal Circuit has determined “that the Due Process Clause at issue for personal jurisdiction in a patent case is that of the Fifth Amendment, and not the Fourteenth.”
Red Wing Shoe,
In
International Shoe,
the Supreme Court held that “due process requires only that in order to subject a de- • fendant to a judgment in personam, if he be not present within the territory of the forum, he have certain minimum contacts with it such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
a. Purposefully Directed Activities
In
Red Wing Shoe,
the Federal Circuit held that there was no personal jurisdiction over a defendant patentee in a declaratory judgment action where the patentee’s only contacts with the forum were three cease-and-desist letters sent to the plaintiff.
Plaintiffs allege, and have offered some evidence to prove, that RTI, through Weinberger, sent at least eight demand letters and made over fifty telephone calls to OpenLCR in Colorado. Throughout an approximately six-month рeriod, Wein-
Moreover, Plaintiffs’ evidence indicates that Weinberger persisted with threats of litigation against OpenLCR, Casio, and the Sharp parties despite receiving documentation from OpenLCR and the Sharp parties showing that Sharp’s facsimile machines use AIpha-LCR technology, a technology that Plaintiffs contend predates conception of the teсhnology embodied in the ’085 and ’769 Patents and renders these patents invalid. (Gallenstein Aff. ¶¶ 8-10.) While recognizing that Plaintiffs’ tort claims for intentional interference with business relations “in what is essentially a patent case are not reliable bases for jurisdiction,”
see Kash ’N Gold v. ATSPI, Inc.,
b. Claim Arises out of or Relates to Activities
The Federal Circuit has observed that sending cease-and-desist letters may give rise to a declaratory judgment action in a distant forum provided that maintenance of personal jurisdiction comports with notions of “ ‘fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
See Red Wing Shoe,
In the event a pаtentee casts its net of cease-and-desist letters too widely and entangles some non-infringing products, a plaintiff may have little recourse otherthan a declaratory judgment action to disentangle its non-infringing business. In those instances, the cease-and-desist letters are the cause of the entanglement and at least partially give rise to the plaintiffs action.
Red Wing Shoe,
c. Reasonable and Fair
The third prong of the personal jurisdiction analysis “embodies the due process considerations of personal jurisdiction and places the burden on the party over whom jurisdiction is sought to prove that jurisdiction would be constitutionally unreasonable.”
3D Sys.,
RTI contends that its burden in having to litigate the patent issue in a distant forum vastly outweighs any interest of the Plaintiffs or the forum in adjudicating the dispute within the forum. The Court acknowledges the heavy burden imposed on RTI to defend this lawsuit. However, RTI cannot dispute Colorado’s “manifest interest” in preventing harm to one of its residents caused by bad-faith еnforcement of patent rights.
See Burger King,
In sum, Plaintiffs’ evidence at this early stage of the litigation provides at least some support for their allegations that RTI was more interested in potential licensing agreements than it was with enforcing patent rights, that RTI disregarded any possibility that its patents may be invalid, and that RTI intentionally interfered with OpenLCR’s business relationships in an effort to force licensing agreements. Because the evidence indicates that RTI’s actions exceeded simple enforcement of patent rights, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have established a prima facie case of personal jurisdiction.
2. Improper Venue
RTI moves to dismiss for improper venue on grounds that it is not subject to ■ this Court’s personal jurisdiction. Having ruled that RTI is subject to personal jurisdiction, this motion must be denied. In nоn-diversity actions, venue is proper in any judicial district where the defendant resides. See 28 U.S.C.A. § 1391(b) (West 1993). For purposes of venue, “a defendant that is a corporation shall be deemed to reside in any judicial district in which it is subject to personal jurisdiction at the time the action is commenced.” Id. § 1391(c). Accordingly, RTI is deemed to reside in this judicial district and venue is proper.
3. Insufficient Process and Insufficient Service of Process
RTI next seeks dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint on grounds of insufficient process and insufficient service of process. Plaintiffs brought this action against “Rates Technology, Inc., a New York corporation,” apparently a real company, but one totally unrelated to the intended Defendant, Rates Technology, Inc., a Delaware corporation. However, the Court finds that Plaintiffs’ mistake was a mere technical error that resulted in no prejudice to RTI. RTI was served, had notice of the suit, and timely responded to the Amended Complaint. Because Plaintiffs’ error did not result in prejudice to RTI, the Court must deny RTI’s motion to dismiss for insufficient service of process and insufficient process.
See United States v. A.H. Fischer Lumber Co.,
4.First-to-File Rule
RTI seeks dismissal of claims brought by the Sharp parties on grounds that RTI filed the New York lawsuit over the same patents against the Sharp parties before the Sharp parties joined in filing the Amended Complaint in this case. RTI argues that the issues raised in Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint should have been brought as compulsory counterclaims to RTI’s initial lawsuit against OpenLCR and the Sharp parties in New York. While this may be true, RTI voluntarily dismissed the initial New York lawsuit in its entirety. To now dismiss the Sharp parties from this action for failure to raise compulsory counterclaims in a lawsuit that no longer exists is, at best, unwarranted.
In its briefs regarding this issue, RTI also contends that OpenLCR’s initial Complaint in this action was filed in response to RTI’s demand letters and in anticipation of RTFs filing suit in New York. RTI complains that Plaintiffs “are attempting to exploit the first-to-file rule by securing a venue that differs from the one that [RTI would have chosen].” (Def.’s Reply Br. at 20.) The Court interprets this as an assertion by RTI that equitable considerations require dismissal of this law
The first-to-file rule may be invoked when a complaint raising the same issues against the same parties has previously been filed in another district court.
See Alltrade, Inc. v. Uniweld Products, Inc.,
RTI is correct that anticipatory lawsuits, as well as lawsuits brought in bad faith, are exceptions to the first-to-file rule.
See id.
at 628. However, anticipatory filing of a declaratory judgment action is not improper where the opposing party has created a controversy by threatening litigation but has withheld filing suit.
See Topp-Cola Co. v. Coca-Cola Co.,
In this case, RTI has offered no evidence indicating that OpenLCR or the Sharp parties considered entering into licensing agreements with RTI. To the contrary, the evidence shows that Plaintiffs presented Weinberger with documentation that, according to Plaintiffs, demonstrates the invalidity of the ’085 and ’769 Patents. Despite receipt of this information, Weim berger apрarently continued with threats of litigation against OpenLCR and users of OpenLCR’s technology. The Court finds that under the circumstances, OpenLCR had a “legitimate and meritorious rationale for seeking a declaratory judgment,”
800-Flowers,
Currently pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York is RTI’s lawsuit against the Sharp parties and Home Shopping Network, Inc. alleging infringement of the ’085 and ’769 Patents. The overlap between RTFs New York lawsuit and this case is not complete; the casеs involve at least some different parties and different legal issues. Where the overlap between two lawsuits is less than complete, courts decide whether to apply the first-to-file rule on a case by case basis, “based on such factors as the extent of overlap, the likelihood of conflict, the comparative advantage and the interest of each forum in resolving the dispute.”
TPM Holdings, Inc. v. Intra-Gold Indus., Inc.,
B. RTI’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Antitrust and State Law Tort Claims
RTI moves for dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Second, Third, and Fourth Claims for Re
1. Antitrust Claim
Plaintiffs’ Second Claim for Relief alleges that RTI, through threats and institution of patent infringement litigation, has attempted to monopolize the United States market for LCR technology through unlawful means. Plaintiffs specifically allege that RTI failed to reasonably investigate whether OpenLCR’s Alpha-LCR technology infringed the ’085 and ’769 Patents, and that RTI knowingly failed to disclose prior art to the Patent Office during prosecution of these patents. RTI seeks dismissal of Plaintiffs’ antitrust claim on grounds that the claim is barred by the Noerr-Pennington doctrine.
The
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine provides that “[t]hose who petition government for redress are generally immune from antitrust liability.”
See Professional Real Estate Investors, Inc. v. Columbia Pictures Indus., Inc.,
Courts have outlined two exceptions to Noerr-Pennington immunity.
A patentee who brings an infringement suit may be subject to antitrust liability for the anti-comрetitive effects of that suit if the alleged infringer (the antitrust plaintiff) proves (1) that the asserted patent was obtained through knowing and willful fraud within the meaning of Walker Process Equipment, Inc. v. Food Machinery & Chemical Corp., 382 U.S.172, 177, 86 S.Ct. 347 ,15 L.Ed.2d 247 (1965), or (2) that the infringement suit was “a mere sham to cover what is actually nothing more than an attempt to interfere directly with the business relationships of a competitor,” [Noerr.;365 U.S. at 144 ,81 S.Ct. 523 ];....
See Nobelpharma AB v. Implant Innovations, Inc.,
2. Tort Claims
Plaintiffs’ Third and Fourth Claims for Relief allege that RTI intentionally interfered with OpenLCR’s contractual relationships and prospective business advantage by threatening and instituting patent infringement litigation. RTI seeks dismissal of these claims also on the basis of Noerr-Pennington immunity.
The Tenth Circuit has determined that
Noerr-Pennington,
although based in part on constitutional principles, is not itself constitutional.
See Cardtoons v. Major League Baseball Players Ass’n,
This leaves the question of whether and to what extent the Petition Clause imposes limitations on Plaintiffs’ tort law causes of action based not on RTFs threats of litigation, but on allegations that RTI filed a baseless lawsuit in an attempt to interfere with Plaintiffs’ contractual relations and prospective business advantage. However,
Conclusion
For reasons stated,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant’s motion to dismiss for "lack of personal jurisdiction, improper venue, insufficiency of process, insufficiency of service of process, and the first-to-file rule is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Second, Third, and Fourth Claims for Relief is DENIED.
Notes
. The Plaintiffs incorrectly identified RTI as a New York corporation in the caption of their Amended Complaint.
. Plaintiffs have argued that the minimum contacts standard is satisfied by RTI’s other activities in the forum, including licensing the '308 Patent to companies that are either located in Colorado or that do business in Colorado, filing a previous patent infringement action in this Court to enforce the '308 Patent, and publicizing the LCR technology through the national media. The Court specifically rejects these contacts as establishing personal jurisdiction over RTI in this action; Plaintiffs’ causes of action do not arise from or relate to these activities.
. As noted above, in addition to the declaratory judgment claim, Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint alleges a Second Claim for Relief for attempted monopolization, a Third Claim for Relief for tortious interference with the OpenLCR-Sharp contract, and a Fourth Claim for Relief for tortious interference with the OpenLCR-Casio contract and prospective business advantage of OpenLCR. Although RTI moves for dismissal of only the Second and Third Claims for Relief, RTI asserts that all of Plaintiffs’ tort and antitrust claims are barred as a matter of law, and Plaintiffs have responded to this assertion. Accordingly, the Court shall treat the motion as seeking dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Second, Third, and Fourth ' Claims for Relief.
