Steve Stumbo appeals the decisions of the United States District Court for the District of Colorado granting summary judgment of noninfringement in favor of Eastman Outdoors, Inc. and Ameristep Corporation (collectively, Defendants). We affirm the judgments of the district court.
BACKGROUND
Steve Stumbo, the plaintiff-appellant, brought suit against Eastman Outdoors and Ameristep for alleged infringement of United States Patent No. 5,628,338 (the '338 patent). Stumbo’s invention involves a portable and collapsible hunting shelter or blind that allows quick and easy set-up by hunters, photographers, and other wildlife enthusiasts. The hub-style blind has four walls and a top made of fabric that is stretched taut by five foldable support members when fully assembled. Central to this case, the '338 patent claims a “closable vertical opening” at a side edge or vertical corner through which one can enter and exit the blind. Figure 1 of the '338 patent illustrates this opening:
[[Image here]]
The Defendants’ accused products also involve portable and collapsible hub-style blinds. However, one enters and exits the Eastman Outdoors accused product through a triangular-shaped “loose door flap” by unzipping a zipper diagonally northeast from the bottom of and into the center of one of the side walls, then diagonally northwest to the top of one of the side walls. Similarly, one enters and exits Ameristep’s accused products through a triangular-shaped door opening created when a first zipper is unzipped from an upper corner of a side wall to the center of the wall, and a second zipper is unzipped from a lower corner of the side wall to the center of the wall, as shown below:
*1361 [[Image here]]
The Defendants moved for summary-judgment as to all of Stumbo’s claims, arguing that their products do not infringe the '338 patent, either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents. Construing the term “elosable vertical opening” as a “slit-like opening that runs straight up and down or perpendicular to the plane of the horizon,” the district court concluded that no genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether the accused products literally infringed the '338 patent given that they had triangular openings. The district court also concluded that no genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether the accused products infringed under the doctrine of equivalents because their triangular openings did not operate in substantially the same way to create substantially the same result as the '338 patent’s vertical slit. Moreover, the district court held that Stumbo could not claim triangular openings under the doctrine of equivalents because the '338 patent would then , cover the prior art.
Stumbo v. Ameristep, Corp.,
No. 05-CV-00663,
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment of nonin-fringement
de novo. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. v. U.S. Surgical Corp.,
I
Claim construction is a question of law that we review
de novo. Cybor Corp. v. FAS Techs., Inc.,
When construing claims, a court must begin by “look[ing] to the words of the claims themselves ... to define the scope of the patented invention.”
Phillips v. AWH Corp.,
The district court concluded, based on expert testimony that Stumbo does not dispute on appeal, that the phrase “closa-ble vertical opening” does not have any special meaning in the hunting blind industry.
See, e.g., Ameristep,
Starting with the text of the claims, the phrases “along one of said side edges” in claim 1 and “along one vertical corner of said structure” in claim 7 are used to describe the word “opening” separately and in addition to the word “vertical.” Therefore, construing the word “vertical” as referring to merely the orientation of the opening would render the phrases “along one of said side edges” and “along one vertical corner of said structure” superfluous, a methodology of claim construction that this court has denounced.
Merck & Co. v. Teva Pharms. USA, Inc.,
That the word “vertical” refers to the slit-like shape of the opening is further supported by the specification of the '338 *1363 patent. The written description explicitly states that:
[a] zipper is incorporated in one corner of the structure where two side walls meet.... The leg members must flex in order to enable the door opening to expand for ingress and egress. When the zipper is in an open position, the fabric adjacent to the opening can be pulled slightly away from the opening (which results in widening of the opening as the pegs flex).
’338 Patent col.3 11.29-36 (emphasis added). The fact that the leg members must flex to enable entry and exit indicates that the opening in the '338 patent is a slit. Triangular loose door flaps, such as the openings in the accused products, certainly would not require leg members to flex.
In support of his construction, Stumbo points to the summary of the invention, which reads “an openable doorway is positioned vertically at one corner of the blind or shelter to enable ingress and egress.” Id. col.2 11.13-15. This sentence does not support Stumbo’s proposed construction. An entry and exit pathway positioned along the side edges or vertical corners of a cube-shaped blind will necessarily be vertically positioned.
Stumbo also relies on
CCS Fitness, Inc. v. Brunswick Corp.,
By contrast, the specification of the '338 patent inherently requires a slit-like shape for the opening. The specification explicitly discloses that the “legs must flex in order to enable the door opening to expand for ingress and egress.” '338 Patent col.3 11.31-36. The fabric adjacent to the opening is then pulled slightly away from the opening, which results in a widening of the opening. Id. A linear slit is the only fathomable shape of an opening with the described characteristics. Figure 1, the only figure of an opening in the '338 patent, illustrates a vertical slit-like opening, further supporting this construction. Id. fig. 1. There is nothing in the specification to suggest that the patentee contemplated that any other shape of opening could work with this invention.
In sum, the district court correctly interpreted the claims in the context of the claim language and the specification.
II
Stumbo does not dispute that the accused products do not have vertical slit-like openings. Thus, there is no factual dispute — the accused products do not literally infringe the '338 patent. Stumbo nonetheless argues that the district court erred in holding no infringement under the *1364 doctrine of equivalents on summary judgment.
A finding of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents requires a showing that the difference between the claimed invention and the accused product was insubstantial.
Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Prods. Co.,
On appeal, Stumbo has failed to raise any genuine issues of material fact as to whether the triangular door flap of Eastman Outdoors’ accused product operates in substantially the same way with substantially the same result as the slit-like opening of the '338 patent. Eastman Outdoors offers the declaration of its chief engineer, which describes the manner in which one enters and exits Eastman Outdoors’ accused product as involving a triangular opening with a single zipper that extends “diagonally northeast from the bottom of and into the center of one of the side walls, then diagonally northwest, to the top of one of the side walls.” The unzipping creates a loose door flap that, when held to the side, creates a large triangular opening, allowing one to “freely and easily enter or exit the blind.” The Chief Engineer also submitted photographs that show that there is no need for the legs to flex in order to enter or exit.
In comparison, as the Chief Engineer noted, the specification of the '338 patent details a vertical zipper such that “the leg members must flex in order to enable the door opening to expand for ingress and egress.” '338 Patent col.3 11.31-33. In this way, the fabric adjacent to the opening “can be pulled slightly away from the opening (which results in widening of the opening as the pegs flex).” Id. col.3 11.34— 36.
As for differing results, the Chief Engineer asserted that Eastman Outdoors’ accused product, by virtue of the wider access created by its triangular door flap, is safer than a linear slit-like opening for use by gun and equipment toting hunters. The Chief Engineer attached product guides for Eastman Outdoors’ accused product that further demonstrate “a hunter easily exiting the blind with equipment on his shoulder and in his hand.”
In response, Stumbo merely asserts that Eastman Outdoors’ argument that its triangular flap makes it easier or safer to enter its blind is “not relevant,” because “[n]one of the claims of the patent discuss or identify any issues relative to safety.” We have indeed held in prior cases that the function-way-result test focuses on “an examination of the claim and the explanation of it found in the written description of the patent.”
AquaTex Indus., Inc. v. Techniche Solutions,
In this case, Eastman Outdoors has offered, through the declaration of its chief engineer, that a person ordinarily skilled in the art would conclude that the vertical slit opening of the '388 patent and the triangular opening of the Eastman Outdoors accused products substantially differ in way and result. 2 Stumbo, on the other hand, has not produced a single shred of particularized evidence as to how the vertical opening of the '338 patent creates substantially the same result. The only evidence proffered by Stumbo is the declaration of its engineering expert, Rex Paul-sen, which stated generally that the openings in the Eastman Outdoors accused product and the '338 patent are “substantially equivalent,” but never stated with any specificity how the openings are substantially the same in way and result vis-a-vis safety.
Likewise, Stumbo has failed to raise any genuine issues of material fact as to whether the triangular door flap of Amer-istep’s accused products operate in substantially the same way with substantially the same result as the slit-like opening of the '338 patent. As the president of Am-eristep described in his affidavit, the triangular door flaps of Ameristep's products may be opened by unzipping two zippers “without having to flex or distort the legs of the sub-frame assemblies.” Ameristep’s president stated that, unlike the self-closing opening of the '338 patent, the triangular flap of fabric may be rolled up, leaving a triangular door opening in the fabric wall panel. In response, Stumbo offered the declaration of its engineering expert that stated in conclusory fashion that the ways the two different openings operated were not “significantly different.” However, the declaration did not explain how either opening operated or how the differences were insubstantial. We have repeatedly held that such cursory conclusions will not withstand summary judgment.
See Tex. Instruments, Inc. v. Cypress Semiconductor Corp.,
CONCLUSION
Having failed to produce any evidence to the contrary, Stumbo has not raised a genuine issue of material fact as to infringement under the doctrine of equiva *1366 lents by either Eastman Outdoors’ or Am-eristep’s accused products. Given this holding, we need not reach the issues of practicing the prior art or claim element vitiation. The district court’s grant of summary judgment of noninfringement is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Seldom does a patent tout the advantages of alternative (non-patented) ways of doing something. In fact, if the element under scrutiny is a later developed equivalent, the patent would almost certainly be silent on the differing results.
. We do not consider the Chief Engineer's assertion with regard to Stumbo's commercial embodiment, the Double Bull blind.
See Johnson & Johnston Assocs., Inc. v. R.E. Serv. Co.,
