ORDER ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Before the Court are cross-motions for summary judgment, filed October 3, 2014, by plaintiff Synopsys Inc. (“Synopsys”) and defendant Mentor Graphics Corporation (“Mentor”), by which the parties set forth their respective positions as to the patent eligibility of eight claims as recited in three patents held by Synopsys,
BACKGROUND
The three patents at issue (hereinafter “the Gregory patents”) relate generally to the field of integrated circuit (“IC” or “chip”) design. ICs are composed of logic circuits and memory circuits, which themselves are composed of “tens, hundreds, or even potentially thousands, of transistors, resistors, capacitors, or other hardware components.” (See Decl. of Ronald D. Blanton, Ph.D. (“Blanton Deck”), filed October 3, 2014, ¶ 8.) In the 1950s, when ICs were first developed, engineers would hand draw the chip designs with symbols or schematics representing the hardware components to be used. In the mid-1980s, a method of automating chip design, EDA, was developed to help solve the problem of the ever-increasing number of hardware components capable of being integrated on a chip. EDA “involves the use of computers to, among other things, create integrated circuit designs, simulate the designs using only software, and emulate the designs using a combination of hardware and software.” (Id. ¶ 14.)
The Gregory patents are directed to a form of EDA known as “logic synthesis.” In the subject field, logic synthesis is generally understood to mean the process of “using a computer tool to interpret or ‘synthesize’ a human designer’s descriptions of the operations of the integrated circuit” and then “generating],” typically as a “netlist,” the “electronic circuit components (e.g., logic circuits) ... that perform those operations.” (See id. ¶ 15.) The human-generated descriptions are written by an engineer, or “user,” in a hardware description language (HDL), one of several languages developed specifically for EDA. (Id. at ¶ 16.)
The Gregory patents claim a way of performing synthesis, described therein as “[a] method and system ... for generating a logic network using a hardware indepen
Claim 1 of the ’841 patent, which is representative of the asserted claims, states:
1. A method for converting a hardware independent user description of a logic circuit, that includes flow control statements including an IF statement and a GOTO statement, and directive statements that define levels, of logic signals, into logic circuit hardware components comprising:
converting the flow control statements and directive statements in the user description for a logic signal Q into an assignment condition AL(Q) for an asynchronous load function AL() and an assignment condition AD(Q) for an asynchronous data function AD(); and
generating a level sensitive latch when both said assignment condition AL(Q) and said assignment condition AD(Q) are non-constant;
wherein said assignment condition AD(Q) is a signal on á data input line of said flow through latch;
said assignment condition AL(Q) is a signal on a latch gate line of said flow through latch; and
an output signal of said flow through latch is said logic signal Q.
Id., col. 62:60-col. 63:12.
Each of the steps in the claimed methods can be performed by a skilled designer either mentally or with pencil and paper, and the examples in the patents were created by the inventors without use of a computer. Although the claims themselves do not expressly call for a computer or other piece of equipment, the method is primarily intended for use with a computer, and the patents append source code for a computer program implementing the claimed inventions. (See Deck of Maria Beier, filed October 3, 2014, Ex. F (Deposition of Russ Segal) at 26:13-27 (stating “we emulated what a computer would do in order to generate these tables”); see also ’841 Patent, col. 9:42-45 (stating “[t]he system and method of this invention are operable in a computer system that includes a data input device, such as a keyboard, a processing unit, and an output display device”).
LEGAL STANDARD
Pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a “court shall
The Supreme Court’s 1986 “trilogy” of Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317,
Additionally, as patents are presumed to be valid, see 35 U.S.C. § 282, an alleged infringer asserting an invalidity defense pursuant to § 101 bears the burden of proving invalidity by clear and convincing evidence. Microsoft Corp. v. i4i L.P., — U.S. -,
DISCUSSION
As set forth in § 101, “whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor.” See 35 U.S.C. § 101. The Supreme Court, however, has carved out “three specific exceptions to § 101’s broad patent-eligibility principles,” Bilski v. Kappos,
Most recently, in Alice Corp. Pty. Ltd. v. CLS Bank Int’l, — U.S.-,
First, [a court] determine[s] whether the claims at issue are directed to one of those patent-ineligible concepts. If so, [the court] then ask[s], “[w]hat else is there in the claims before [it]?” To answer that question, [the court] consider[s] the elements of each claim bothindividually and as an ordered combination to determine whether the additional elements transform the nature of the claim into a patent-eligible application .... [S]tep two of this analysis [has been described] as a search for an “inventive concept” — i.e., an element or combination of elements that is sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the [ineligible concept] itself.
Id. at 2355 ( internal quotations and citations omitted).
Mentor contends the claims at issue cover patent-ineligible abstract ideas and that there are no additional elements transforming the abstract ideas into patent-eligible applications of such ideas. Synopsys argues to the contrary.
A. Abstract Idea
“The ‘abstract ideas’ category embodies the longstanding rationale that an idea of itself is not patentable.” Alice,
The claimed methods here at issue do not entail anything physical. Rather, as discussed above, the asserted claims are directed to the process of inference, which is fundamental to IC design and can be performed mentally. The claims describe, in essence, various algorithms for determining the hardware components and layout of an IC from a user’s description of what the user needs the chip to do, i.e., the “specified signals and circumstances under which the signals are produced.” (See ’841 patent, Abstract.) In other words, the claims are directed to a mental process. A “mental process [is] a subcategory of un-patentable abstract ideas.” CyberSource Corporation v. Retail Decisions, Inc.,
Synopsys’ contention that the asserted claims are not directed to an abstract idea because they describe “concrete steps in a computerized process for creating a netlist of hardware elements” (Synopsys Mot. at 9:16-17) is unpersuasive. As Mentor points out, however, there is an abundance of Supreme Court and Federal Circuit authority invalidating on § 101 grounds patents that likewise could be described as including “concrete steps.” See, e.g., Alice,
The Court also finds unpersuasive Sy-nopsys’ argument that any distinction as to the “subject matter” of the claimed abstract idea (see Synopsys Mot. at 10:7-9) is significant at step one of the analysis. Although, as Synopsys points out, a number of cases characterizing patents as directed to abstract ideas have considered “claims
Similarly unpersuasive is Synopsys’ argument that the claimed methods somehow lose their quality as abstract ideas because they are not as “simple” (Synop-sys Mot. at 11:1) as the methods held to be abstract in some of the cases cited to this Court. First, the claimed methods do not require complex calculations; as noted, the claimed steps were performed mentally by the inventors and can be performed by a skilled designer either mentally or with the aid of a pencil and paper. Moreover, and more importantly, Synopsys points to nothing in the authority it endeavors to distinguish that would suggest that at this stage of the analysis, any such decision hinged in any manner on the complexity of the abstract idea at issue therein.
Accordingly, the Court finds the asserted claims in the Gregory patents are directed to an abstract idea. The Court next turns to the second step of the analysis.
B. Inventive Concept
An invention is not necessarily ineligible for patent protection because it involves an abstract idea. As set forth above, once a court determines a claim is directed to a patent-ineligible concept, it must “consider the elements of each claim both individually and as an ordered combination to determine whether the additional elements transform the nature of the claim into a patent-eligible application.” Alice,
Here, in an effort to demonstrate the requisite “inventive concept,” Synopsys first points to the lack of any reference to the claimed methods in the prior art. Sy-nopsys’ reliance on a lack of prior art is misplaced, however. As one district court has noted, “[i]t is important to distinguish novelty and obviousness from the ‘inventive feature’ inquiry required by the Supreme Court in Alice.” See Cogent Med., Inc. v. Elsevier Inc.,
Similarly unavailing is Synopsys’ argument that the asserted claims do not “pose a risk of preemption,” as logic syn
Synopsys also argues the claims here at issue recite more than the “conventional steps” found ineligible in Alice and Mayo. (See Synopsys Mot. at 11:19-23 (citing Alice,
The asserted claims, like those in Alice and Mayo, add nothing other than a way to implement that mental process on a computer. As one of the two named inventors explained:
[T]he methods that humans were using to convert HDLs to circuits weren’t methods that were — that you could run on a computer and do automatically.
So the thing that Russ and I were charged with was figuring out how to take this manual process that human beings were doing ... and figure out how we could come up with a method so a computer could do it.
And that’s sort of the essence of, I think, what we were asked to do and what we did.
(Gregory Dep. at 239:2-12; see also id. at 238:23-239:1 (“All of [the claims’] concepts and ideas are what Russ and I came up with in order to automate what the humans were doing to convert it into such a method that a computer could run.”).)
Lastly, Synopsys contends the claimed methods qualify as transformative under the “machine-or-transformation test,” see Bilski,
Accordingly, for all of the reasons set forth above, the Court finds the asserted claims in the Gregory patents lack the inventive concept necessary to transform a patent-ineligible abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, the Court concludes the asserted claims are invalid under § 101, and, accordingly:
1. Mentor Graphics’ motion for summary judgment is hereby GRANTED.
2. Synopsys’ motion for summary judgment is hereby DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Synopsys' motion addresses other issues as well. This order concerns only the issue of patent eligibility.
. The patents are attached to the Complaint as Exhibits A, B, and C, respectively.
. The facts set forth below are derived from the patents and the declarations submitted by the parties, and are undisputed.
. An "assignment condition” is "the condition under which the hardware description function is true for a particular variable in the user description.” (See Order Construing Claims, Doc. No. 100, at 5:3-4); see also '841 Patent, col,15:66-16:l (stating hardware description functions "represent specific operations that are implemented with specific hardware”).
. Here, as noted, the parties have filed cross-motions. Consequently, as to each said motion, the Court, in deciding whether to enter judgment as requested therein, has viewed the evidence in the light most favorable to the opposing party.
. Synopsys also notes that the Gregory patents’ "disclosure includes 64 columns of drawings, explanation, and examples, and approximately 200 pages of computer code for a program implementing the claimed inventions.” (See Synopsys Mot. at 11:24-25.) "The complexity of the implementing software or the level of detail in the specification does not transform a claim reciting only an abstract concept into a patent-eligible system or method,” however. See Accenture Global Servs., GmbH v. Guidewire Software, Inc.,
