OrdeR Granting Motion of Defendant to Stay Pending Inter Partes Review
I. Introduction
As set forth herein, the Court Grants the motion of defendant Apple Inc. to stay this case in favor of inter partes review proceedings currently underway before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”). (Dkt. No. 125.)
II. Background
A. Inter Partes Review
The Leahy-Smith America Invents' Act (“ALA”), introduced in 2012, replaced the former inter partes reexamination proceeding with an inter partes review process. Semiconductor Energy Lab. Co., Ltd. v. Chimei Innolux Corp., Case No. 12-cv-21 JST,
B. The Instant Litigation •
The suit at bar comprised part of the second of two waves of litigation that plaintiff PersonalWeb Technologies LLC (“PersonalWeb”) filed in the Eastern District of Texas encompassing the same seven patents, all of which involve data storage systems that use “substantially unique identifiers” to identify and access data. PersonalWeb filed the first wave of suits in December 2011 against EMC, VMWare, Google, Facebook, and others. The suits against EMC, VMWare, Google, Facebook and NetApp have been transferred to this District, where Judge Davila stayed them pending the resolution of inter partes review proceedings.
In September 2012, PersonalWeb instituted a second wave of suits in the Eastern District of Texas against companies such as Microsoft, Yahoo, IBM, and Rackspace.
In April 2013, Apple moved to transfer this case to the Northern District of California. Judge Davis of the Eastern District of Texas conditionally granted this motion upon completion of the Mgrkman hearing and issuance of his Claim Construction Order. The PTO granted Ne-tApp’s petition for inter partes review of the '791 patent on July 25, 2013. On August 5, 2013, Judge Davis issued his Claim Construction Order regarding all seven patents-in-suit. In September 2013, Apple filed a petition with the PTO requesting inter partes review of four claims of the '810 patent. Judge Davis transferred this case to this District in February 2014, and the PTO granted inter partes review in March 2014. On April 15, 2014, the PTO granted Backspace’s petition for inter partes review of the '791, '280, and '310 patents. As a result of Apple’s and third-party petitions, 15 of the 34 claims at issue in this case are now subject to inter partes review proceedings.
This Court was assigned the case on May 2, 2014. On August 1, 2014, Apple filed the present Motion to Stay Pending Inter Partes Review. (Dkt. No. 125 (“Motion”).)
III. Discussion
Courts in this District examine three factors when determining whether to stay a patent infringement case pending review or reexamination of the patents: “(1) whether discovery is complete and whether a trial date has been set; (2) whether a stay will simplify the issues in question and trial of the case; and (3) whether a stay would unduly prejudice or present a clear tactical disadvantage to the nonmoving party.” Telemac Corp. v. Teledigital, Inc.,
Moreover, the above factors must be reviewed in the context of Fresenius, which held that “when a claim is cancelled, the patentee loses any cause of action based on that claim, and any pending litigation in which the claims are asserted becomes moot.” Fresenius USA, Inc. v. Baxter Int’l, Inc.,
A. Factor 1: Stage of Litigation
First, the Court looks to the question of-whether litigation has progressed significantly enough for a stay to be disfavored. In weighing this factor, courts examine the posture and circumstances of each case on an individual basis. See TPK Touch Solutions, Inc.,
Here, as PersonalWeb contends, the parties have undertaken significant work on the case. A substantial amount of fact discovery has been completed: the parties have exchanged over 100 requests for production of documents and have in fact produced over 500,000 pages; have propounded and responded to over 50 interrogatories; and have taken a dozen depositions. Further, in addition to work carried out by the parties, the judicial system has expended significant resources on the case. The Eastern District of Texas has overseen the proceedings thus far, set an initial trial date, and issued a claim construction order regarding all of the patents-in-suit.
As Apple points out, however, while much has been done, much remains, and the remaining work is costly. The Court has not set a fact discovery cutoff date.
This Court granted a stay in a procedurally similar case stemming from PersonalWeb’s first wave of litigation. See Personal Web I,
The Court concurs with the perspectives set forth in Personal Web Technologies and EMSAT Advanced. In this case, too, already the parties have undertaken significant work, but the Court has not set a trial date and several costly stages of discovery remain. Moreover, the landscape of the litigation could change dramatically in light of any PTAB ruling and the parties should have the benefit of that change before making strategic choices for trial. Thus, this factor slightly weighs in favor of a stay.
B. Factor 2: Simplification of Issues
Second, the Court looks to whether a stay will simplify the issues in question and trial of the case. A stay is favored where “the outcome of the reexamination would be likely to assist the court in determining patent validity and, if the claims were canceled in the reexamination, would eliminate the need to try the infringement issue.” Evolutionary Intelligence LLC v. Apple, Inc., Case No. 13-cv-04201 WHA,
Here, of the 34 claims at issue, 15 are subject to various inter partes review proceedings instituted by Apple or third parties. Apple’s inter partes review petition met the PTO’s stringent “reasonable likelihood” standard involving four claims of '310 patent and was granted in March 2014. Further, the PTO granted additional inter partes review petitions brought by third parties involving 11 other claims-at-issue.
PersonalWeb argues that, because 19 claims from 5 of the 7 patents are not subject to any inter partes review, the PTAB’s final decision may not simplify a substantial number of issues. This argument is not persuasive because all seven of the patents-at-issue are related. All seven patents claim priority to U.S. Patent Application No. 08/425,160 and share a common specification. Moreover, all patents involve the same subject matter — data storage systems that use “substantially unique identifiers.” Thus, the PTAB’s final decision regarding the claims subject to inter partes review may overlap with claims not subject to inter partes review. This overlap will further simplify the issues and trial of this case, thus increasing judicial economy and conserving both the parties’ and the Court’s resources.
A stay has been granted in two factually similar cases from this District. For example, in KLA-Tencor Corp. v. Nanometrics, Inc., the defendants “movefd] the court for a stay of all proceedings, including the litigation as to the ’330 patent infringement cause of action, pending the reexamination of the '580 and '656 patents.” KLA-Tencor Corp. v. Nanometrics, Inc., Case No. 05-cv-03116 JSW,
Similarly, in Methode Elec., Inc. v. Infineon Technologies Corp., Infineon moved to stay the litigation of both the reexamined and non-reexamined patents-in-suit. Methode Elec., Inc. v. Infineon Technologies Corp., Case No. 99-cv-21142 JW,
The Court concurs with the perspectives set forth in KLA-Tencor and Methode. In this case, while not all the claims-at-issue are subject to inter partes review, the issues and trial of the case will be simplified after the PTAB issues its final written decisions. Fifteen of the 34 claims are directly subject to inter partes review, and the remaining 19 claims are related with possible overlapping issues that could further simplify trial. Moreover, in determining whether to grant a stay of an entire case, courts consider whether there would remain, after the PTAB reexamination, issues “completely unrelated to patent infringement” for which a stay would not reduce the burden of litigation on both the parties and the court. Imax Corp. v. In-Three, Inc.,
The Court concludes that the second factor weighs in favor of a stay. •
C. Factor 3: Undue Prejudice
Third, the Court looks to whether a stay would unduly prejudice or present a clear tactical disadvantage to the nonmoving party. PersonalWeb makes three arguments as to this factor: (1) the review and reexamination proceedings instituted against PersonalWeb are years from completion; (2) a stay will prejudice Personal-Web’s licensing efforts; and (3) the timing of Apple’s petition for inter partes review and the instant Motion reveal gamesmanship. Upon review of these arguments, PersonalWeb does not persuade.
PersonalWeb’s first argument, regarding the delay inter partes review proceedings cause, merely points to generalized harm such as the potential loss of evidence and availability of witnesses. Courts have repeatedly found no undue prejudice unless the patentee makes a specific showing of prejudice beyond the delay necessarily inherent in any stay. E.g., Pragmatus AV,
As to PersonalWeb’s second argument, that entry of a stay will harm its efforts to license the patents-in-suit, speculative harm to licensing efforts does not supply a reason to deny a stay. “[CJourts have consistently found that a patent licensor cannot be prejudiced by a stay because monetary damages provide adequate redress for infringement.” Pragmatus AV,
Third, PersonalWeb argues that the timing of Apple’s petition for inter partes review and this Motion is evidence
In the final analysis, Personal-Web’s arguments against staying the case are not persuasive. The Court further notes that, here, the parties here do not compete in the marketplace. “Unlike patent infringement actions involving nonpracticing entities, infringement among competitors can cause harm in the marketplace that is not compensable by readily calculable money damages.” Avago Technologies Fiber IP (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. v. IPtronics Inc., Case No. 10-cv-02863 EJD,
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the Court Grants the motion of defendant Apple. Case No. 14-cv-1683 YGR is hereby Stayed pending final exhaustion of the inter partes review proceedings to which U.S. Patent No. 7,802,310 is currently subject. Apple is Ordered to file a status notice with the Court no more than five days after the PTAB’s completion of inter partes review proceedings regarding the ’310 patent. The Case Management Conference (Dkt.127) set for October 27, 2014 is hereby Vacated.
This Order terminates Docket No. 125.
It Is So Ordered
. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 78(b) and .Civil Local Rule 7 — 1(b), the Court vacated the hearing set for September 9, 2014. (Dkt. No 130.)
. PersonalWeb Technologies LLC v. EMC Corp. et al (5:13-cv-01358 EJD); PersonalWeb Technologies LLC v. Google Inc. et al (5:13-cv-01317 EJD); PersonalWeb Technologies LLC v. Facebook Inc. (5:13-cv-01356 EJD); PersonalWeb Technologies LLC v. NetApp Inc. (5:13-cv-01359 EJD).
. U.S. Patent Nos. 5,978,791; 6,415,280; 7,802,310; 7,945,539; 7,945,544; 7,949,662; 8,001,096.
. A Case Management Conference is set for October 27, 2014. (Dkt. No. 127.)
. PersonalWeb filed the instant suit in the Eastern District Texas on September 17, 2012. Apple filed its petition for inter partes review on September 18, 2013, and the present Motion on August 1, 2014.
. On March 26, 2014, the PTO granted Apple's petition for inter partes review.
