MEMORANDUM
I. INTRODUCTION.........................................................895
II. BACKGROUND...........................................................896
III. DISCUSSION.............................................................896
A. Legal Standard........................................................896
1. Historical Underpinnings and Their Demise............................897
2. Split in Authority on Twombly-Iqbal’s Applicability to Affirmative Defenses........................................................898
3. Standard to be Applied by the Court..................................900
B. Application............................................................902
1. Split in Authority Amongst Courts Construing Similar Pleadings .........902
2. Defendant’s Pleading................................................903
a. The affirmative defense..........................................903
b. The counterclaim...............................................903
IV. CONCLUSION............................................................905
I. INTRODUCTION
The Supreme Court’s decisions in
Bell Atlantic Corporation v. Twombly,
Plaintiff Tyco Fire Products LP (“Plaintiff’) brings this patent infringement suit against Victaulic Company (“Defendant”). Plaintiff alleges that Defendant has infringed two of Plaintiffs patents: (1) United States Patent Number 7,793,736 (“'736 Patent”), entitled “Ceiling-Only Dry Sprinkler Systems and Methods for Addressing a Storage Occupancy Fire”; and (2) United States Patent Number 7,819,201 (“'201 Patent”), entitled “Upright, Early Suppression Fast Response Sprinkler.” (Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 9, 19.) Defendant’s answer pleads five affirmative defenses and asserts two counterclaims. Amongst these affirmative defenses and counterclaims are Defendant’s conclusory averments that Plaintiffs patents are “invalid and/or unenforceable.” Plaintiff asks the Court to strike the affirmative defense to that effect under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f), and to dismiss the corresponding counterclaim pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that: (1) Twombly and Iqbal do not apply to affirmative defenses; (2) Defendant’s affirmative defense satisfies the applicable standard; (3) a portion of Defendant’s affirmative defense is redundant; and (4) Defendant’s counterclaim fails under Twombly and Iqbal. As a corollary to these findings, the Court notes that relying on local patent rules to alter the pleading standard is not consistent with the national rules, and observes that Rule 84 and the forms to which it provides safe harbor should be modified or repealed to the extent they are incompatible with Twombly and Iqbal.
Thus, as set forth more fully below, Plaintiffs motion will be granted in part and denied in part. Defendant’s counter *896 claim will be dismissed and the redundant portion of Defendant’s affirmative defense will be stricken.
II. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff claims that its patents are infringed by Defendant’s manufacture and sale of the Model LP-46 V4603 K25 Standard Response Storage Upright Sprinklers of varying temperature ratings. (See id. ¶¶ 13, 23.) Defendant acknowledges manufacturing and marketing the products in question, (see Answer ¶¶ 12, 22), but denies Plaintiffs averments of patent infringement, (see id. ¶¶ 14-18, 24-28). Defendant further raises a series of affirmative defenses and two counterclaims, both of which assert, in relevant part, that Plaintiffs patents are “invalid and/or unenforceable.”
This contention appears in three portions of Defendant’s answer. First, Defendant’s Third Affirmative Defense provides that Plaintiffs patents are “invalid and/or unenforceable for failure to comply with the conditions of patentability specified in Title 35 of the United States Code, including, without limitation, at least §§ 101,102, 103 and 112.” (Id. ¶ 31.) Second, Defendant pleads a counterclaim averring that the “patents are invalid and/or unenforceable for failure to comply with the conditions of patentability specified in Title 35 of the United States Code, including, without limitation, at least §§ 101, 102, 103 and 112.” (Id. ¶ 39.) Finally, Defendant’s request for relief seeks an Order declaring that the claims of the patents are “invalid and unenforceable.”
III. DISCUSSION
Plaintiff takes issue with Defendant’s averment that the patents are “invalid and/or unenforceable” and asks the Court to (1) strike Defendant’s third affirmative defense; (2) dismiss Defendant’s second counterclaim; and (3) strike Defendant’s request for relief insofar as it asks for an Order declaring the patents “invalid and unenforceable.” Citing Twombly and Iqbal, Plaintiff contends that Defendant has failed to give Plaintiff fair notice of the basis upon which the “invalid and/or unenforceable” affirmative defense and counterclaim depend. Plaintiff further extrapolates that Defendant’s allegation of unenforceability may be predicated on inequitable conduct, and contends that its motion should therefore be granted because Defendant’s pleading does not satisfy Rule 9(b).
Defendant responds that a patent can be unenforceable for many reasons — one of which is invalidity itself — and that Plaintiff mistakenly presumes the defense and counterclaim intend to allege inequitable conduct. Defendant, therefore, contends that Rule 9(b) does not apply, and that the answer’s allegations provide sufficient notice under the governing standard set forth in Rule 8. Defendant further reasons that the answer and counterclaims should remain intact because they provide the same level of factual detail as Plaintiffs pleading.
Interestingly, the parties have not suggested that the standard of review applicable to Defendant’s counterclaim may differ from that which applies to Defendant’s affirmative defense. In fact, the parties’ briefing only gives cursory treatment to the legal standard to be applied in evaluating Plaintiffs motion. When the Court inquired into this matter at oral argument, both parties suggested that the plausibility standard set forth in Twombly and Iqbal was controlling. This proposition, however, is hardly self-evident, and deserves due consideration. Thus, the Court begins by addressing this issue.
A. Legal Standard
Plaintiffs motion is governed by Rules 12(b)(6) and 12(f). 1 The former pro *897 vides a basis by which a party may challenge the sufficiency of a counterclaim, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) (stating that “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted” is a defense to a claim for relief), while the latter permits parties to challenge the sufficiency of an affirmative defense, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(f) (stating that the court “may strike from a pleading an insufficient defense”). Although both procedural devices are concerned with a pleading’s legal sufficiency, the requirements underlying the sufficiency determination stem from different sources: Rule 8(a) applies to claims (and therefore counterclaims and crossclaims), while Rule 8(c) sets forth the standard for affirmative defenses. 2
1. Historical Underpinnings and Their Demise
Both rules, however, share a common purpose. Indeed, so-called “notice pleading” has always been the hallmark of Rules 8(a) and 8(c), which ultimately function to provide the opponent with notice of the claim or defense pled.
See, e.g., Twombly,
In evaluating pleadings for legal sufficiency under Rules 12(b)(6) and 12(f), courts historically applied Conley’s “no set of facts” test whereby the pleading in question would survive a challenge unless there was no set of facts under which the pleader could prevail.
See, e.g., Conley,
However, notwithstanding that Rule 12(e) provides a basis for remedying deficient notice and does not permit dismissal, the notion that a pleading should provide notice was often merged into the inquiry
*898
for assessing legal sufficiency by way of a motion to dismiss or strike.
3
See
Stephen B. Burbank,
Summary Judgment, Pleading, and the Future of Transsubstantive Procedure,
43 Akron L. Rev. 1189, 1191 n. 14 (2010). In doing so, courts fixed the quantum of notice required by reference to the complexity of the facts and legal theory alleged.
See, e.g., Loftus v. Se. Pa. Transp. Auth.,
The Supreme Court’s decisions in
Twombly
and
Iqbal,
both of which expressly and closely tied the concept of notice to a claim’s legal sufficiency, have drastically reshaped these principles. In dispensing with
Conley’s
“no set of facts” test, the
Twombly
Court held that a complaint’s factual allegations must “be enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.”
Twombly,
Instead, under
Twombly,
the pleadings must contain sufficient factual allegations as to state a facially plausible claim for relief.
See id.
at 570,
2. Split in Authority on TwomblyIqbal’s Applicability to Affirmative Defenses
In the wake of
Twombly
and
Iqbal,
it is clear that a claim or counterclaim must set forth sufficient facts to give rise to a plausible claim for relief.
See, e.g., PPG Indus., Inc. v. Generon IGS, Inc.,
But many courts have persuasively argued that
Twombly
and
Iqbal
do not apply to affirmative defenses. In
Charleswell v. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.,
for example, Judge DuBois distinguished Rule 8(a) from Rule 8(c), noting that Rule 8(a) requires a “statement of the claim
showing
that the pleader is entitled to relief’ while Rule 8(c) only requires a pleader to
“state”
an affirmative defense. No. 01-119,
Pointing to the textual distinction Judge DuBois identified as well as other considerations, Judge Simandle recently reached the same conclusion.
See Fed. Trade Comm’n v. Hope Now Modifications, LLC,
09-1204,
Under the Rules, a plaintiff faced with a vague or possibly frivolous defense is not without remedy. Defendants’ affirmative defenses can easily be explored through contention interrogatories to the Defendants ....
The Court further notes that the Rules provide some further protections .... First, a defendant must make the initial disclosures of persons having discoverable information, and of documents ... pertinent to its defenses. Second, ... Rule 11(b)(2) provides that defense counsel, by signing such a pleading, certifies to the best of counsel’s belief, formed after reasonable inquiry, that ‘the ... defenses ... are warranted by existing law or by a nonfrivolous argument for extending, modifying, or reversing existing law,’ and that a breach of this duty, such as by asserting frivolous defenses, is subject to Rule 11(e) sanctions.
Id.
at *3-4;
accord Romantine v. CH2M Hill Eng’rs., Inc.,
No. 09-973,
Other courts have declined to resolve the issue at all, reasoning that fair notice has always been required of affirmative defenses and that the defense at issue failed to provide as much.
See, e.g., Dann,
3. Standard to be Applied by the Court
In light of the differences between Rules 8(a) and 8(c) in text and purpose, the Court concludes that
Twombly
and
Iqbal
do not apply to affirmative defenses. An affirmative defense need not be plausible to survive; it must merely provide fair notice of the issue involved.
5
See Resolution Trust Corp. v. Baker,
No. 93-93,
*901
Instead, the requisite notice is provided where the affirmative defense in question alerts the adversary to the existence of the issue for trial.
See N.H. Ins. Co. v. Marinemax of Ohio, Inc.,
The architecture of Rule 8 confirms this approach. Rule 8 provides that a party must merely state, not show, an affirmative defense. Compare Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(a) with Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c). And while there is a need for a more factual understanding of a claim as to permit the formulation of a response, a party served with an affirmative defense is generally not required or permitted to file any responsive pleading at all. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 7(a). The need for notice of an affirmative defense is therefore diminished considerably.
Moreover, applying the concept of notice to require more than awareness of the issue’s existence imposes an unreasonable burden on defendants who risk the prospect of waiving a defense at trial by failing to plead it,
e.g., Creative Consumer Concepts, Inc. v. Kreisler,
For these reasons, the Court will evaluate the challenged affirmative defense and counterclaim through a markedly different lens even though Plaintiff attacks them on the same ground. The counterclaim must be plausible under Twombly whereas the affirmative defense will be deemed sufficient unless it fails to provide fair notice of the issue. 7 Although this methodology may lead to different outcomes following judicial scrutiny of claims and affirmative defenses of the same stripe, Rule 8 requires as much and the apparent incongruity is warranted by the different forms of relief accorded by affirmative defenses and counterclaims. This case aptly demonstrates this point. If Defendant prevailed on its counterclaim, it would be entitled to an Order declaring Plaintiffs patent invalid. This, of course, would render Plaintiffs patent null as against any party. A victory on the affirmative defense, by contrast, would not clearly have this effect. 8
*902 Thus, with the abovementioned guiding principles in mind, the Court turns to address Plaintiffs motion.
B. Application
In the post
Twombly-Iqbal
world, several courts have, with varying results, dealt with similar affirmative defenses and counterclaims made by patent defendants. Some courts have merely been confronted with counterclaims asserting that a patent is invalid or unenforceable.
See, e.g., Genetic Tech. Ltd. v. Interleukin Genetics Inc.,
No. 10-69,
1. Split in Authority Amongst Courts Construing Similar Pleadings
At times, the court considering the plaintiffs motion has, citing fair notice, dismissed the counterclaim and struck the affirmative defense without considering whether the applicable pleading standards for counterclaims and defenses may differ. In
Aspex,
for example, the Court observed that the defendant’s counterclaims and affirmative defenses alleging the patents were “invalid and/or unenforceable” were mere assertions “without ... even general facts to support them.”
Id.
Consequently, the Court struck the affirmative defense and dismissed the counterclaims.
See id.
(“Mere conclusory assertions are not sufficient to give plaintiffs notice of the counterclaims and defenses and, thus, do not meet Rule 8(a)’s pleading standards.”);
see also Sprint Commc’ns Co., L.P. v. The-globe.com, Inc.,
Some courts, however, have permitted defendants to proceed on similarly pled counterclaims and defenses.
Elan Pharma International Ltd. v. Lupin Limited,
No. 09-1008,
[The defendant’s] language in its counterclaims and affirmative defenses mirrors the language [the plaintiff] employed in its own Complaint. There is no basis for this Court to, on the one hand, allow [the plaintiff] to plead as it has while, on the other hand, require [the defendant], inexplicably, to provide more detailed factual support for its counterclaims and defenses....
Additionally, the Local Patent Rules require specificity at a later stage than [the plaintiff] argues is required, pursuant to Twombly and Iqbal. Both [the plaintiff] and [the defendant] will have to disclose their respective theories and the accordant facts in order to comply with *903 Local Patent Rules 3.1 and 3.3. This motion suggests a factual disclosure that the Federal Circuit does not require, and a disclosure that, if required here, would make Rules 3.1 and 3.3 superfluous. This Court cannot rule in a manner that undermines logic, the Federal Rules, and the District of New Jersey Local Patent Rules.
Id. at *5 (internal footnotes omitted).
Several courts have agreed with the
Elan
Court’s reasoning.
See, e.g., Pfizer Inc. v. Apotex Inc.,
2. Defendant’s Pleading
a. The affirmative defense
As discussed above, an affirmative defense must only provide the opponent fair notice of the issue involved.
9
Under this standard, Defendant’s affirmative defense is plainly satisfactory to the extent it avers “invalidity.” It provides Plaintiff with notice that Defendant anticipates defending this suit on grounds of invalidity, the details of which Plaintiff can flesh out through discovery.
See Marine-max,
b. The counterclaim
Determining whether Defendant’s counterclaim on the same grounds suffices
*904
requires the Court to consider whether Defendant’s claim of invalidity or unenforceability is “plausible” under
Twombly
and
Iqbal.
Defendant’s counterclaim plainly does not satisfy this standard: it contains a mere legal conclusion, no supporting facts, and cites.four broad provisions of Title 35 of the United States Code in support “without limitation.” (Answer ¶ 39.) As noted, some courts have forgiven similarly sparse counterclaims based on the low bar to which the plaintiffs averments of patent infringement were subjected and their district’s adoption of specialized local patent rules.
See Elan,
First, the Court cannot rely on the local patent rules upon which these courts have depended because the Eastern District of Pennsylvania has not adopted local patent rules. Even if the this district did adopt local patent rules, however, they could not modify a defendant’s pleading standard for counterclaims under the national rules. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 83(a)(1) (“A local rule must be consistent with — but not duplicate — [the national] federal statutes and rules ....”); see also 28 U.S.C. § 2071(a). Using local patent rules to alter a defendant’s pleading obligations, while perhaps practical given the very unique nature of federal patent litigation, offends the trans-substantive character of federal procedure. 10 See Fed.R.Civ.P. 1 (“These rules govern the procedure in all civil actions and proceedings in the United States district courts .... ”).
Second, the Court rejects the principle of permitting the defendant to plead less to survive a motion to dismiss based on apparent deficiencies in the plaintiffs pleading. (See Def.’s Br. In Opp. to PL’s Mot., at 5-7.) Two wrongs do not make a right; if the plaintiff does not plead a plausible claim for relief under Twombly, the defendant is entitled to seek, and obtain, dismissal of the complaint. The fact that the defendant chooses not to do so does not entitle the defendant to plead counterclaims in a correspondingly insufficient manner. As described earlier, the relief warranted by a counterclaim can be drastic. Here, Defendant’s counterclaim asks the Court to adjudge Plaintiffs patent invalid. Defendant will not be permitted to proceed on such a theory without stating a valid claim even if Plaintiffs pleading may have, itself, been prone to attack.
*905
The Court acknowledges this may place a burden on patent defendants, who will have to plead counterclaims in accordance with
Twombly
but will often be tasked with answering conclusory complaints of direct infringement.
Cf. Microsoft Corp.,
As courts have acknowledged, “[i]t is not easy to reconcile Form 18 with the guidance of the Supreme Court in
Twombly
and
Iqbal.” Elan Microelectronics Corp. v. Apple, Inc.,
No. 09-1531,
Put simply, the forms purporting to illustrate what level of pleading is required do not reflect the sea change of Twombly and Iqbal. Rule 84, however, instructs that the forms “suffice” such that pleaders who plead in accordance with the forms are subject to a safe harbor. Fed.R.Civ.P. 84; see 12 Wright & Miller, supra, § 3162. This inconsistency between the Supreme Court’s interpretation of Rule 8(a) and the forms Rule 84 validates should be remedied: either by modifying or eliminating Rule 84 or by updating the forms to clearly comply with existing law. 13
Because the Court will not excuse Defendant’s sparse pleading, Plaintiffs motion to dismiss Defendant’s second counterclaim will be granted. Consequently, the Court will strike Paragraph 2(a) of Defendant’s answer, which asks for an Order declaring the patents invalid and unenforceable.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs motion will be granted in part and denied in part as follows: (1) Defendant’s second *906 counterclaim will be dismissed; (2) the term unenforceable will be stricken from Defendant’s third affirmative defense as redundant; and (3) Defendant’s request for an Order declaring the patents invalid and unenforceable will be stricken. The Court will, however, grant Defendant leave to amend its pleading. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a)(2). An appropriate Order will follow.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 12th day of April, 2011, it is hereby ORDERED that Plaintiffs motion to dismiss Defendant’s second counterclaim and to strike Defendant’s third affirmative defense (doe. no. 16) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part as follows:
1) Defendant’s second counterclaim is hereby DISMISSED without prejudice;
2) The words “and/or unenforceable” in Defendant’s third affirmative defense are hereby STRICKEN;
3) Paragraph 2(a) of Defendant’s request for relief is hereby STRICKEN;
4) Defendant shall be permitted to file an amended answer by April 26, 2011.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The fact that this case is a patent case has no bearing on the legal standard applied.
See McZeal v. Sprint Nextel Corp.,
. Rule 8(a) requires the pleader to aver "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2). Rule 8(c), by contrast, requires "a party [to] affirmatively state any avoidance or affirmative defense.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(c)(1).
. This appears to have led to at least two distinct results. Some courts incorporated the requirement of notice into the standard for dismissal such that a complaint or defense providing insufficient notice of what was being asserted would be dismissed or struck respectively.
See, e.g., Nicolosi-Russo v. Program Brokerage Corp.,
No. 05-9373,
.
See also Farm Credit of N.W. Fla., ACA v. Dilsheimer,
No. 10-4515,
. As noted, an affirmative defense would have been assessed under the "no set of facts” test before
Twombly
with the concept of fair notice being tied into the analysis in one way or another.
See supra
Part III.A.l. In deference to the
Twombly
Court’s admonition that the "no set of facts” test "has earned its retirement,”
see Twombly,
.Form 30 is referred to by Rule 84, which provides that a pleading in accordance with the forms suffices under the rules. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 84. Rule 84 was enacted to ensure that such pleadings would be treated favorably by the courts. See 12 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3162 ("Prior to 1948 an occasional case held a pleading insufficient even though it conformed to one of the Official Forms. To avoid such decisions the rule was amended in 1948 and now states explicitly that the forms are 'sufficient under the rules.' " (internal footnotes omitted)). While the Court believes Twombly and Iqbal cast doubt on the propriety of some of the forms, see infra Part III.B.2.b, they do so because of their interpretation of Rule 8(a)’s requirements-not Rule 8(c)'s. Thus, Form 30 remains an accurate illustration of what Rule 8(c) requires of an affirmative defense.
. More, of course, will be required should the allegations at issue relate to "fraud or mistake.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). Such pleadings are subject to Rule 9(b)'s particularized requirements regardless of whether they are made by way of an affirmative defense or a claim. See id.; see also 5 Wright & Miller, supra, § 1274 (noting that the only exceptions to the general pleading rule for affirmative defenses "are the defenses that fall within the special pleading provisions in Rule 9, especially Rule 9(b)”).
. While adjudication of the affirmative defense would bind the parties in this and any *902 future action, any greater reach would necessarily depend on principles of issue preclusion.
. The Court rejects Plaintiff's contention that Rule 9(b) applies to Defendant's averments. This argument, which is predicated on Plaintiff's speculation that Defendant's counterclaim and affirmative defense refer to Plaintiff's inequitable conduct, is misplaced. While it is true that inequitable conduct must be pled with specificity in accordance with Rule 9(b),
see Ferguson Beauregard/Logic Controls, Div. of Dover Res., Inc. v. Mega Sys., LLC,
Indeed, as Defendant correctly states, an invalid patent is unenforceable. Moreover, a patent is unenforceable as against a particular party to the extent that party has a cognizable license defense.
See Hewlett-Packard Co. v. Repeat-O-Type Stencil Mfg. Corp.,
. The notion that courts may enact rules of procedure concerning a specific subject matter is itself debatable. The Rules Enabling Act only permits the Supreme Court to "prescribe general rules of practice and procedure,” 28 U.S.C. § 2072(a) (emphasis added), and local rules must be consistent with the national rules promulgated by the Supreme Court, see 28 U.S.C. § 2071(a). A well-known civil procedure scholar has opined that the Rules Enabling Act's use of the word "general” refers to the fact that the rules issued by the Supreme Court "should not be limited in their application either to a particular geographic area or to a particular subject matter of dispute.” Paul D. Carrington, Making Rules to Dispose of Manifestly Unfounded Assertions: An Exorcism of the Bogy of Non-Trans-Substantive Rules of Civil Procedure, 137 U. Pa. L. Rev. 2067, 2079 (1989) (internal footnote omitted); but see Stephen B. Burbank, The Transformation of American Civil Procedure: The Example of Rule 11, 137 U.Pa. L. Rev. 1925, 1934-35 (1989) (questioning this interpretation). Under Professor Carrington's view, specialized topic-based rules of procedure appear to be improper.
. When McZeal was decided, the Form illustrating a "Complaint for Patent Infringement” appeared at Form 16. It now appears at Form 18.
. The form demonstrating a negligence pleading has been changed since Twombly was decided. It previously included more specific details regarding how the plaintiff was injured and the type of injury sustained. See Fed.R.Civ.P., App. of Forms, Form 9 (2006) (averring that the plaintiff was injured when he crossed a highway and was "thrown down and had his leg broken” as a result). The present iteration of this form, which appears at Form 11, omits these details. See Fed.R.Civ.P., App. of Forms, Form 11 (stating only that the defendant negligently drove a vehicle "against the plaintiff” which led the plaintiff to suffer physical injury).
.Presently, Forms 10 through 21 outline sample complaints. The Advisory Committee should consider revisiting them as necessary.
