RICHTEK TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION, Plaintiff, v. uPI SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION, AMANDA DAI, and JACKY LEE, Defendants.
No. C 09-05659 WHA
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
August 16, 2016
WILLIAM ALSUP
Case 3:09-cv-05659-WHA Document 522 Filed 08/16/16 Page 1 of 5
ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTION FOR LEAVE TO AMEND INFRINGEMENT CONTENTIONS AND VACATING HEARING
INTRODUCTION
In this patent infringement action, plaintiff seeks to amend its infringement contentions to assert an earlier priority date, to supplement its disclosure of its own products that purportedly practice the asserted claims, and to delete contentions about dismissed defendants. For the reasons stated below, plaintiff‘s motion is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART.
STATEMENT
Plaintiff Richtek Technology Corporation owns U.S. Patent No. 7,315,190, which covers technology used in direct-current-to-direct-current (DC-DC) power controllers. Richtek accuses defendant uPI Semiconductor Corporation of developing, marketing, and selling products that practice the ‘190 patent. The application for the ‘190 patent was filed in June 2006, and identified Isaac Chen as the inventor.
In November 2010, Richtek served its initial disclosure of asserted claims and infringement contentions in this action pursuant to the Patent Local Rules. In that disclosure, Richtek identified June 16, 2006 — the date of the filing of the application of the ‘190 patent — as the priority date.
Our case further languished pending reexamination of the ‘190 patent before the United States Patent and Trademark Office. There, Richtek disclosed interpretations of various claim limitations, which led uPI to identify several new prior art references. In June 2016 (after the stay in this action had been lifted), an order granted uPI‘s request for leave to amend its invalidity contentions to address the new references. The parties have deemed all discovery from the ITC investigation produced in this action (Dkt. No. 473).
Fact discovery closes in this action on August 31. On July 14, Richtek sought leave to amend its infringement contentions in three ways: (i) to delete contentions about dismissed defendants, (ii) to assert an earlier priority date for the ‘190 patent, and (iii) to supplement it disclosure of its own products that practice the asserted claims. uPI opposes this motion as to the first two proposed amendments. This order follows full briefing.
ANALYSIS
This order addresses each of Richtek‘s proposed amendments in turn.
1. ASSERTING EARLIER PRIORITY DATE.
Richtek seeks to amend its disclosure of the priority date of the ‘190 patent to claim a priority date of April 2006 (without specifying which date in April). It contends this priority date only became relevant after uPI successfully moved to amend its invalidity contentions to address prior art from June 2006, but it offers no explanation of why it failed to assert this earlier date at the outset of this action. Richtek simply argues that uPI cannot be prejudiced by this belated disclosure because it knew that Chen testified to a conception date of April 2006 based on his deposition testimony in the ITC investigation.
Although this order does not accept Richtek‘s assertion that defendants would not be prejudiced by this belated shift in the sands of the litigation, Richtek‘s attempt to show the absence of such prejudice only highlights its lack of diligence. If uPI can be charged with knowledge that Richtek would claim an April 2006 priority date in this action based on Chen‘s testimony in the ITC investigation, a fortiori, Richtek could have formalized that assertion in its very first infringement contentions.
Richtek‘s argument that the earlier conception date only became relevant when uPI was given leave to amend its invalidity contentions to assert prior art from June 2006 is unavailing.
2. IDENTIFYING ADDITIONAL RICHTEK PRODUCTS.
If a party claiming patent infringement wishes to preserve the right to rely, for any purpose, on the assertion that its own apparatus, product, device, process, method, act, or other instrumentality practices the claimed invention, the party shall identify, separately for each asserted claim, each such apparatus, product, device, process, method, act or other instrumentality that incorporates or reflects that particular claim.
Richtek seeks to amend its infringement contentions to identify five additional products that Richtek itself manufactured and sold and that it contends practiced the asserted patents. Richtek‘s motion offers no description of the products, fails to identify their release date, and does not even pay lip service to the requirement to seek this amendment diligently. Richtek merely asserts that it is “obliged to supplement its disclosures,” although the
Richtek also offers no explanation of what purpose this additional disclosure would serve or how it intends to rely on these products in this case. Instead, Richtek merely asserts that the patent local rules do not require it to identify the purpose of the disclosure. Richtek‘s argument ignores, however, the fact that it must show good cause to support its request for leave to amend its disclosure. This is especially so in light of its utter lack of diligence in seeking this amendment just more than a month before the close of discovery. Thus, Richtek‘s motion to
3. REMOVING CONTENTIONS ABOUT DISMISSED DEFENDANTS.
Defendants do not oppose Richtek‘s request to delete infringement contentions pertaining to defendants that have been dismissed following a settlement conference. There can be no prejudice to either side inasmuch as this amendment would simplify Richtek‘s infringement contentions such that they address only those issues actually in contention in this action. Richtek acted diligently by bringing his motion less than one month after the last of the settling defendants was dismissed from the action. Thus, Richtek‘s motion to remove contentions pertaining to dismissed defendants is GRANTED.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, Richtek‘s motion is GRANTED as to its request to delete infringement contentions related to dismissed defendants but otherwise DENIED. The hearing scheduled for AUGUST 18 is hereby VACATED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: August 15, 2016.
WILLIAM ALSUP
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
