Case Information
*2 Before R ADER , Chief Judge , M OORE , Circuit Judge and
A IKEN , District Judge . [*]
M OORE , Circuit Judge .
Craig Thorner and Virtual Reality Feedback Corpora- tion (Appellants, collectively) accused Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC and a number of other Sony entities (Sony, collectively) of infringing claims of U.S. patent no. 6,422,941 (’941 patent) relating to a tactile feedback system for computer video games. The district court construed disputed claim terms and the parties stipulated to a judgment of noninfringement. Because the district court improperly limited the term “attached to said pad” to mean attachment only to an external surface and erred in its construction of the term “flexible”, we vacate and remand .
B ACKGROUND
The ’941 patent describes a tactile feedback system for use with video games. Figure 2 shows the many different embodiments of the invention:
Tactile feedback controller 110 is part of a larger gaming system that operates one or more of the devices shown above. Each device includes some type of actuator that provides tactile feedback to a user in response to certain game activities. ’941 patent col.2 ll.44-52. For instance, the actuators in hand-held game controller 598 may vibrate during a crash in a car racing game. Independent claim 1 requires “a flexible pad,” “a plurality of actuators attached to said pad” and a control circuit that activates the actuators in response to game activity. The accused products are hand-held game controllers.
Two claim limitations are relevant to this appeal, “flexible pad” and “attached to said pad.” The district court held that flexible does not mean simply “capable of being flexed.” Thorner v. Sony Computer Entm’t Am. LLC , No. 09-cv-1894, 2010 WL 3811283, at *3 (D.N.J. Sept. 23, 2010). It reasoned that this definition was inappropriate because “[m]any objects that are capable of being flexed are not flexible. A steel I-beam is capable of being flexed, but no one would call it ‘flexible.’” Id. The court thus construed the term to mean “capable of being noticeably flexed with ease.” Id.
The district court then turned to the construction of “attached to said pad.” Id. at *5-7. Appellants argued that attached should be given its plain and ordinary meaning and that an actuator can be attached to the inside of an object. Sony argued that “attached to said pad” should be construed as affixed to the exterior surface of the pad and does not include embedded within said pad. The court held that “the specification redefines ‘attached’ by implication.” Id. at *6. The court held that the word attached was limited to attached to the outside of an object because the embodiments in the specification consistently use the term “attached” to indicate affixing an actuator to the outer surface of an object and use the word “embedded” when referring to an actuator inside an object. For additional support for the notion that at- tached and embedded have different meanings, the court pointed to claim 1 which uses the word “attached” and dependent claim 10 which uses the word “embedded.” Id.
Following claim construction, the parties stipulated to noninfringement by the accused products. They stated that “under the Court’s construction of the phrase ‘at- tached to said pad,’ Defendants have not infringed . . . .” The stipulation further stated that the “parties reserve their rights to challenge this or any other construction of the disputed claim phrases of the ’941 patent on appeal.” J.A. 14-15. We have jurisdiction over this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
D ISCUSSION
We review claim construction
de novo
.
Cybor Corp. v.
FAS Techs., Inc.
,
To act as its own lexicographer, a patentee must
“clearly set forth a definition of the disputed claim term”
other than its plain and ordinary meaning.
CCS Fitness,
Inc. v. Brunswick Corp.
, 288 F.3d 1359, 1366 (Fed. Cir.
2002). It is not enough for a patentee to simply disclose a
single embodiment or use a word in the same manner in
all embodiments, the patentee must “clearly express an
intent” to redefine the term.
Helmsderfer v. Bobrick
Washroom Equip., Inc.
, 527 F.3d 1379, 1381 (Fed. Cir.
2008);
see also Kara Tech. Inc. v. Stamps.com
, 582 F.3d
1341, 1347-48 (Fed. Cir. 2009). “[T]he inventor’s written
description of the invention, for example, is relevant and
controlling insofar as it provides
clear lexicography
. . .”
C.R. Bard, Inc. v. U.S. Surgical Corp.
,
The standard for disavowal of claim scope is similarly
exacting. “Where the specification makes clear that the
invention does not include a particular feature, that
feature is deemed to be outside the reach of the claims of
the patent, even though the language of the claims, read
without reference to the specification, might be considered
broad enough to encompass the feature in question.”
Scimed Life Sys., Inc. v. Advanced Cardiovascular Sys.,
Inc.
,
Mere criticism of a particular embodiment encom-
passed in the plain meaning of a claim term is not suffi-
cient to rise to the level of clear disavowal.
Epistar Corp.
v. Int’l Trade Comm’n
, 566 F.3d 1321, 1335 (Fed. Cir.
2009) (holding that even a direct criticism of a particular
technique did not rise to the level of clear disavowal). In
Spine Solutions, Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek USA,
Inc.
, we explained that even where a particular structure
makes it “particularly difficult” to obtain certain benefits
of the claimed invention, this does not rise to the level of
disavowal of the structure.
It is the claims that define the metes and bounds of
the patentee’s invention.
Phillips
,
Claim 1 of the patent at issue includes the disputed claim terms:
In a computer or video game system, apparatus for providing, in response to signals generated by said computer or video game system, a tactile sen- sation to a user of said computer or video game system, said apparatus comprising: a flexible pad;
a plurality of actuators, attached to said pad , for selectively generating tactile sensation; and a control circuit . . . for generating a control signal to control activation of said plurality of actua- tors . . . .
(emphasis added).
I. “attached to said pad”
Appellants argue that the district court erred by hold- ing that the specification implicitly defined “attached” to mean “affixed to an exterior surface.” They argue that the term does not require any construction and that the plain and ordinary meaning includes affixing an item to either an exterior or an interior surface. They contend that the specification explicitly states whether an attachment is to an interior or exterior surface: “a vibratory actuator can be attached to [the] outer side of the throttle handle.” Appellant’s Br. 13 (quoting ’941 patent col.39 ll.58-60). They argue this shows that when the applicant wished to distinguish an internal from an external attachment, he did so with deliberate, express language. Thus, appellants argue that the specification contemplates “attached” to have its plain and ordinary meaning—attached to either an interior or exterior surface. Finally, appellants argue that the fact that claim 10 includes the word “embedded” does not mean that “attached” can only mean connected to an exterior surface. Rather, appellants argue that “em- bedded” is merely a narrower term that includes only attachment to an interior surface.
Sony responds that the patent clearly identified two different connections, “attached to” and “embedded within.” It argues that in every instance where the speci- fication uses the term “attached,” it refers to an attach- ment to an outer surface. Conversely, in every embodiment where the actuator is placed inside a hous- ing, the specification uses the term “embedded.” See, e.g. , ’941 patent col.32 l.66 (“embedded within or attached to”).
Our case law is clear, claim terms must be given their
plain and ordinary meaning to one of skill in the art.
Phillips
,
The fact that the specification uses the two terms “at- tached” and “embedded” as alternatives does not require a different result. See, e.g. , id. col.32 l.66. There is nothing inconsistent about the applicant’s use of the narrower term, “embedded,” to describe embodiments affixed to an internal surface. The plain and ordinary meaning of embedded, “attached within,” is narrower than “at- tached.” Hence it makes sense that the applicant would want to use embedded when it meant to explicitly claim attached to the inside only. That does not mean the word attached automatically means attached to the external surface, as opposed to the broader plain meaning – at- tached to either the interior or exterior.
It is true that in certain pre-
Phillips
cases, we held
that use of two terms as alternatives could amount to an
implicit redefinition of the terms.
See Bell Atl. Network
Servs., Inc. v. Covad Commc’ns Grp., Inc.
,
Other parts of the claim and specification also support this construction. The claim at issue requires a “flexible pad.” The only embodiment in the specification that includes flexible material is the seat cushion 510 shown in Figure 2. The specification states that “the tactile feed- back seating unit 510 is a semi-rigid flexible foam struc- ture . . . with a plurality of actuators embedded within the foam structure.” ’941 patent col.37 ll.6-10. Thus, the only flexible embodiment in the specification has embedded actuators. If we agreed with Sony that “attached” must mean attached to an outer surface, then the claim would exclude the only flexible embodiment disclosed in the specification. This is further evidence that the term “attached” should have its plain and ordinary meaning which includes either internal or external attachments.
We hold that the term “attached to said pad” should be given its plain and ordinary meaning which encom- passes either internal or external attachment. Because the parties based the stipulation of noninfringement on the district court’s erroneous construction of this claim term, we vacate and remand.
II. “flexible pad”
As an initial matter, Sony argues that our case law
precludes us from deciding claim construction issues that
are not implicated by the district court’s judgment.
Appellee’s Br. 25 (citing
Mass. Inst. of Tech. v. Abacus
Software
(
MIT
),
Appellants argue that the term “flexible” simply means “capable of being flexed” and that the district court erred by requiring “capable of being noticeably flexed with ease.” They note that the specification only uses the term “flexible pad” when referring to a “semi-rigid” structure and that a “semi-rigid” structure would certainly not be “noticeably flexed with ease.” Appellant’s Br. 15-16 (citing ’941 patent col.37 ll.6-7, 24, 49).
Sony responds that although the specification uses the term to refer to a “semi-rigid” structure, that struc- ture is made out of foam in every embodiment. It argues that foam is capable of being noticeably flexed with ease and thus a rigid, barely bendable material should not be considered “flexible.” Sony also points to portions of the Markman hearing where the district court judge in- spected one of the accused hard plastic controllers. The judge noted that the controller was rigid and “[i]f I try to flex this thing, I think that you’re going to see it snap.” J.A. 523-24.
We agree with the appellants that the district court improperly limited the term. Neither the claims nor the specification requires the “flexible pad” to be noticeably flexed with ease. The specification says only that the flexible pad must be a semi-rigid structure. The task of determining the degree of flexibility, the degree of rigidity that amounts to “semi-rigid,” is part of the infringement analysis, not part of the claim construction. The district court is of course free on summary judgment to decide that there is no genuine issue of material fact that the accused products in this case do not meet the plain and ordinary meaning of the term “flexible.” We do not mean to suggest that summary judgment is improper in this case, only that claim construction is the wrong venue for this determination.
VACATED and REMANDED
Notes
[*] The Honorable Ann L. Aiken, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of Oregon, sitting by designation.
