Plaintiff Realvirt, LLC filed this 35 U.S.C. § 145 action to challenge a United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) decision rejecting the patentability of the invention claimed in U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 07/773, 161 (the “ 161 Application”). By Order and Memorandum Opinion dated July 19, 2016, plaintiffs complaint was dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the ground that plaintiff was not the owner or assign-ee of the 161 Application and hence lacked standing to pursue a § 145 action. See Realvirt, LLC v. Lee,
For the reasons that follow, (1) plaintiffs appeal does not remove jurisdiction to consider both the PTO’s § 145 motion for expenses and plaintiffs motion to stay proceedings; (2) a stay of proceedings is unwarranted because the PTO’s motion for expenses must be resolved regardless of the outcome of plaintiffs appeal, and (3) the PTO is entitled to recover expenses and attorneys’ fees incurred in this proceeding because plaintiff is an applicant, albeit one without standing, and is therefore obligated to pay the PTO’s expenses and attorneys’ fees.
I.
The facts pertinent to the motions at bar may be succinctly summarized.
Plaintiff. Realvirt, LLC is a Delaware Corporation with its office in, Massachusetts. Defendant Michelle K. Lee is the Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and the Director of the PTO. The ’161 Application describes a device that connects computers through multiple networks. Two inventors filed the ’161 Application with the PTO in 1991, and in 1993 the PTO issued a Non-Final Rejection of the claims in the application. Later that year, the PTO issued a Notice of Abandonment to the inventors for failure to respond to the rejection notice. Approximately 14 years later, the inventors tried to revive the ’161 Application, and later sought to transfer their purported ownership interest in the application to plaintiff. The PTO eventually allowed plaintiff now the purported owner and assignee of the ’161 Application, to proceed with its claims.
Following full briefing and oral argument, an Order and Memorandum Opinion issued granting the PTO’s motion and dismissing the complaint on the ground that plaintiff was not an owner or assignee of the 161 Application and thus had no standing to bring the § 145 action. See Realvirt, LLC,
Plaintiff appealed the order dismissing the complaint to the Federal Circuit, and also filed a motion to stay proceedings in the district court concerning the motion for expenses pending the outcome of the appeal. Plaintiff contends that a stay is appropriate because: (i) the Federal Circuit’s resolution of the pending appeal regarding the standing issue may render it unnecessary to decide the § 145 expenses motion, (ii) the resolution of another case currently pending before the Federal Circuit, Nankwest, Inc. v. Lee,
II.
A threshold issue, unaddressed by the parties, is whether jurisdiction exists to decide their motions given the filing of plaintiffs appeal. This question arises because the “filing of a notice of appeal is an event of jurisdictional significance — it confers jurisdiction on the court of appeals and divests the district court of its control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.” Griggs v. Provident Consumer Disc.,
III.
Next, it is appropriate to address whether plaintiffs motion to stay should be granted given the pendency of plaintiffs appeal. Plaintiff argues that a stay is appropriate as the Federal Circuit’s decision in the pending appeal may affect or render it unnecessary at this point to determine whether an applicant without standing is obligated to pay expenses under § 145. This argument fails because § 145’s expenses provision requires all applicants, with or without standing, to pay the PTO’s expenses, regardless of the outcome of the proceedings.
A patent applicant who is unsuccessful before the PTAB has two avenues of relief: (i) a direct appeal of the PTAB’s decision to the Federal Circuit, which reviews the PTAB’s decision based solely on the administrative record, or (ii) the filing of a separate § 145 civil action in the district court, which allows the court to determine whether the applicant should receive a patent based on both the administrative record and any new evidence the applicant wishes to introduce. See 35 U.S.C. §§ 141(a), 145; see also Hyatt v. Kappos,
The specific question before the Hyatt court was whether § 145 imposed any limits on an applicant’s right to present new evidence in a § 145 action. Id. at 1322-23. In holding that § 145 does not impose any such limits (apart from generally applicable evidentiary rules), the Federal Circuit rejected the PTO’s argument that giving § 145 applicants a broad right to introduce new evidence would encourage applicants to use that option — which is more expensive for the PTO than direct, on-the-record appeals to the Federal Circuit — or even conceal evidence before the PTAB and present it later in a § 145 action.
The Federal Circuit’s analysis- of the expenses pro-vision in § 145 finds further support in the parallel system for appealing decisions from the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (“TTAB”). Under 15 U.S.C. § 1071(a)(1), dissatisfied trademark applicants can appeal a TTAB decision directly to the Federal Circuit, whereas § 1071(b)(1) permits them to file a civil action in the district court. Under § 1071(b)(3), “all the expenses of the proceeding shall be paid by the party bringing” the separate civil action. In Shammas v. Focarino, the Fourth Circuit held that the phrase “all the expenses of the proceeding” in 15 U.S.C. § 1071(b)(3) includes attorneys’ fees.
In reaching that decision, the Fourth Circuit relied on features of the trademark review system that are identical to those in the patent review system. As with the patent review system, a trademark applicant’s appeal to the Federal Circuit is limited to the PTO administrative record, whereas applicants in a § 1071(b)(1) civil action may present new evidence. Id. at 225. And as with the patent review system, civil trademark actions in the district court are more costly to the PTO than on-the-record appeals to the Federal Circuit. See id. (“De novo civil actions under § 1071(b)(1)... contemplate a more fulsome and expensive procedure.”). Noting the greater cost of § 1071(b)(1) civil trademark actions, the Fourth Circuit observed that “Congress obviously intended to reduce the financial burden on the PTO in defending such a proceeding.” Id. The Fourth Circuit concluded that “in light of [that] purpose, it makes good sense to construe ‘expenses’ to include attorneys fees and paralegals fees because the time that PTO employees spend in defending the [PTO] will constitute the majority of the PTO’s expenses in such a proceeding.” Id. The Fourth’s Circuit’s analysis of the phrase “all expenses” in the context of the trademark review system, which is identical in all relevant respects to the patent
Because the plaintiff must pay the PTO’s expenses regardless of the outcome, there is no need to await the outcome of plaintiffs Federal Circuit appeal: plaintiff must pay “all expenses” win or lose. Plaintiff contends, however, that if the Federal Circuit affirms that plaintiff lacks standing to pursue its patent application, then plaintiff still is not obligated to pay because “plaintiff lacks standing to bring a § 145 action because it is not an ‘applicant’ within the meaning of that statute,” Realvirt,
That argument fails because it over-reads the district court’s opinion. An “applicant” is “[o]ne who requests something; a petitioner.” Black’s Law Dictionary 115 (9th ed. 2009). Plaintiff is clearly an “applicant” under that definition: plaintiff is a petitioner seeking a decision as to whether plaintiff is “entitled to receive a patent for [its] invention.” 35 U.S.C. § 145; see also Power Integrations, Inc. v. Kappos,
Because the expenses provision in § 145 requires plaintiff to pay the PTO’s expenses regardless of the outcome, there is no need to await the Federal Circuit’s resolution of the pending appeal. Moreover, deciding the expenses issue now gives the Federal Circuit the option to address and decide all issues in this action, thereby avoiding piecemeal appeals in this case. Accordingly, plaintiffs motion to stay proceedings pending the outcome of its appeal is appropriately denied.
IV.
Because plaintiff is an “applicant” that must pay “all expenses” of this § 145 action, regardless of the outcome, the next question is whether the phrase “all expenses” in § 145 obligates plaintiff to pay the PTO’s attorneys’ fees. It does.
Plaintiff contends that the Fourth Circuit’s analysis in Shammas has been abrogated by the recent Supreme Court decision in Baker Botts L.L.P. v. ASARCO LLC addressing the proper interpretation of statutes that purport to shift attorneys’ fees to a losing party. There, the Supreme Court considered whether the phrase “reasonable compensation for actual, necessary services,” which unquestionably allows attorneys to receive compensation for services rendered in connection with the administration of a bankruptcy estate, also permits attorneys to recover fees incurred in successfully litigating their bankruptcy compensation award. — U.S. —,
Plaintiff argues that under Baker Botts, § 145’s phrase “all expenses of the proceedings” is not sufficiently explicit to warrant deviating from the American Rule.
Section 145, like § 1071(b)(3), requires the applicant to pay all expenses “regardless of the outcome.” Hyatt,
Y.
Plaintiffs final contention is that the PTO’s request for attorneys’ fees is improper because the PTO has not provided the proper documentation for its requested fee award. Plaintiff argues that the PTO has failed to produce any documents detailing the specific dates, hours, and tasks for any of the PTO attorneys or paralegals who worked on this case. That level of specificity is not required because the PTO attorneys and paralegals are salaried government employees. Thus, the PTO must use “the actual salaries of the lawyers and paralegals] instead of prevailing market rates” to calculate the attorneys’ fees, thereby allowing the PTO to be reimbursed for “the portion of its attorneys’ [and paralegals’] salaries that were dedicated to this proceeding.” Shammas v. Focarino,
Specifically, the PTO has provided sworn declarations stating the annual salaries and the hours spent on this case from the two attorneys that worked on this case. The declarations also include the number of hours and the hourly rate of the paralegal who worked on this case. See Decl. of Michael S. Forman; Decl. of Philip War-rick. That documentation adequately supports the PTO’s requested $48,454.62 in attorneys’ and paralegal fees. See Shammas,
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, (i) plaintiffs motion to stay the proceedings must be denied, (ii) the PTO’s request for expenses, including attorneys’ fees, must be granted, and (iii) plaintiff must be required to pay $103,259.52 to the PTO, consisting of $50,160.00 in expert witness expenses, $4,644.90 in deposition expenses, and $48,454.62 in attorneys’ fees.
An appropriate order will issue.
Notes
. For a more complete recitation of the facts, see Realvirt, LLC,
. Although the PTO determined that plaintiff had a sufficient ownership interest in the T61 Application to proceed with its claims, that was not a final determination. See Realvirt, LLC v. Lee,
. Section 145 states that an "applicant dissatisfied with the decision of the [PTAB] ... may ... have remedy by civil action against [the PTO]” in the district court. It further provides that “[a]ll expenses of the proceedings shall be paid by the applicant." 35 U.S.C. § 145.
.
. See also West v. Keve,
. The PTO argued that applicants might conceal evidence before the PTAB "to avoid generating adverse prosecution history.” Hyatt,
. To be sure, § 1071(b)(3) and § 145 are not identical. Section 1071(b)(3) provides that applicants must pay all expenses "whether the final decision is in favor of such party or not,” whereas § 145 does not contain such language. Yet, as the history of § 145 makes clear, this difference in language is not significant. When Congress passed § 145’s predecessor in 1870, that statute provided that the applicant must pay all expenses "whether the final decision is in his favor or not." Act of July 8, 1870, ch. 230, sec. 52, 16 Stat. 198, 205 (1870). That language remained in the statute until 1952, when the statute was codified as § 145 in the United States Code as part of Congress’ wholesale reorganization of federal statutes. Act of July 19, 1952, ch. 13, § 145, 66 Stat. 792, 803 (1952); S. Rep. No. 82-1979, at 2395 (1952). There is no indication that Congress removed that language to alter the applicant’s obligation to pay all expenses, win or lose. See S. Rep. No. 82-1979, at 2415; see also Hyatt,
. The PTO argues that the doctrine of invited error forecloses plaintiff's position that plaintiff is not obligated to pay expenses under § 145 because it lacks standing. The PTO’s argument is unpersuasive, but in any event, there is no need to address it because plaintiff is an “applicant” without standing, and as a result is still obligated to pay expenses for the reasons stated above,
. Plaintiff also argues that a stay is appropriate so that the Federal Circuit can decide in Nankwest, Inc. v. Lee whether § 145’s expenses provision authorizes attorneys’ fees See Nankwest, Inc. v. Lee,
