MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff, Yoon Ja Kim, Ph.D. (“Dr. Kim” or “Plaintiff’), brings suit against Sara Lee Bakery Group, Inc. (“Sara Lee” or “Defendant”), alleging patent infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271. (D.E. 1.) 1 Before the Court is Sara Lee’s motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). (D.E. 12.) For the reasons set forth below, the motion is granted.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. The First Action
The parties have been engaged in litigation in this judicial district for a considerable period of time; that litigation substantially predates the filing of this suit and is, indeed, ongoing. Specifically, in May 2001, Dr. Kim filed suit against The Earthgrains Company 2 (the “First Action”) for allegedly infringing Dr. Kim’s United States Patent No. Re. 36,355 (the “'355 Patent”). (First Action, D.E. I.) 3 *931 The '355 Patent, which is entitled “Potassium Brómate Replacer Composition,” describes itself as “a method of preparing potassium brómate replacer,” which has its application in flour-based mixes, bases, breads and other flour-based products. (D.E. 1, Ex. A (abstract); D.E. 1 ¶ 13.) Dr. Kim alleged infringement of the '355 Patent, and identified specifically two Sara Lee products, DTtaliano Italian Bread 4 and Buttertop Wheat Bread. (First Action, D.E. 1 at 4.) In its answer to the initial complaint in the First Action, Sara Lee filed a counterclaim for declaration of non-infringement of the '355 patent. (See D.E. 12, Ex. C (answer and counterclaim) at 5 (seeking an order that defendant “has not infringed, and does not infringe, U.S. Patent No. RE 36,355.”).)
After extensive litigation history not relevant to the matters before this Court, discovery in the First Action began in the Spring of 2003. (First Action, D.E. 31; First Action, 5/8/03 Order (no docket number, but appears unnumbered on docket sheet).) In June 2003, Sara Lee propounded interrogatories to Plaintiff that, among other things, requested that Plaintiff identify each Sara Lee “product that Plaintiff contends infringes the claim, and describe how the product meets each element of the claim.” (See D.E. 23, Ex. A (Def s First Set of Interrogs. to PL, Interrog. No. 4); see also D.E. 23 at 2.) Plaintiff submitted answers to Sara Lee’s interrogatories in September 2003; in response to the interrogatory requesting identification of infringing Sara Lee products, Plaintiff stated that Buttertop bread and DTtaliano bread were manufactured using the potassium brómate replacer composition described in the '355 Patent. (See D.E. 23, Ex. B at 8.) Plaintiff further averred that “[a]part from the products already identified in this interrogatory, Kim cannot at this time specifically identify each and every product by name, manufacturer, description and product code because Earthgrains has not yet produced its documents and information to Kim.” (Id. at 9.)
The First Action proceeded through discovery. The docket reflects that discovery initially was scheduled to close in July 2003. (First Action, D.E. 31.) It appears that the district court extended this deadline, perhaps on its own initiative, to September 2003, and then extended it a second time until December 2003. (First Action, 7/9/03 Order (no docket number); 9/22/03 Scheduling Order (no docket number).) ■
On December 12, 2003, three days before the extended discovery period was set to close, Dr. Kim, through counsel, sought an extension of the discovery deadline. (See First Action, D.E. 38.) Dr. Kim’s motion for extension of discovery was granted, with discovery extended until February 1, 2004. (First Action, D.E. 41.) A review of the docket in the First Action reveals that, as of December 2003, Dr. Kim never had sought to compel any discovery during the initial discovery period or any of the various extensions.
On January 30, 2004, or two days before the again-extended discovery period was set to close, Plaintiff filed a motion, which was agreed to by Sara Lee, for another extension of the discovery period. (First Action, D.E. 47.) That motion was granted as well. (First Action, D.E. 48.) Specifically, Magistrate ■ Judge Mason, who *932 was then and has been presiding over the First Action for all purposes since the parties consented to his jurisdiction in January 2004, extended the discovery period until May 1, 2004. (Id.)
During this discovery extension, in April 2004, Sara Lee produced to Dr. Kim 648 Sara Lee bread formulas containing ascorbic acid and food acid, which are the key ingredients in the '355 Patent. (See First Action, D.E. 88 at 4.) Although Dr. Kim notes that this production occurred in the final week of the discovery period, Dr. Kim did not request a further discovery extension after getting the formulas. The docket in the First Action also reflects that Dr. Kim had never filed any motion to compel this discovery during the final discovery extension, nor at any prior time in the case. (Sara Lee also does not appear to have filed any motions to compel). Fact discovery in the First Action closed on May 1, 2004 (see First Action, D.E. 48), and expert discovery closed on September 2, 2004. (First Action, Order 8/24/2004 (no docket entry).)
On December 7, 2004, Dr. Kim moved for leave to file an amended complaint in the First Action to add an infringement claim based on products sold under the Healthy Choice label and manufactured by Sara Lee under a license agreement with ConAgra. (First Action, D.E. 64 at 4.) The motion stated that “[simultaneous with the prosecution of this case, Dr. Kim pursued a similar action against ConAgra Foods Inc.... In Kim v. ConAgra, Kim accused, and the jury found, that ConAgra’s ‘Healthy Choice’ bread formulas which Earthgrains strictly followed in the manufacture of breads under the ‘Healthy Choice’ brand infringed Kim’s '355 patent.” (Id. at 3.) Dr. Kim stated that she should be given leave to amend “to include Earthgrains’ manufacture, sale and offer for sale of the ‘Healthy Choice’ breads as an ‘Accused Product’.... ” (Id. at 4.) In connection with the motion to amend, Plaintiff asserted that “it must be noted that no prejudice to the parties will occur as no further discovery is necessary based on the amendment to the complaint.” (First Action, D.E. 64 at 4.)
The trial court granted Plaintiffs motion on December 29, 2004, and stated:
Fact discovery has been closed for seven months and expert discovery has been closed for three months. However, while expert discovery was still open, Earthgrains knew that plaintiff was claiming damages for the manufacture and sale of the Healthy Choice products. Indeed, both plaintiffs expert and defendant’s expert addressed the Healthy Choice products in their respective reports. Therefore, we find that the amendment will not cause substantial prejudice to Earthgrains.
(First Action, D.E. 68 at 2.)
On January 3, 2005, Dr. Kim filed her First Amended Complaint, which alleged that Sara Lee manufactured and distributed “certain types of breads under at least the ‘Healthy Choice’ brands and the ‘D’ltalia’ and ‘Buttertop’ brands (collectively ‘Accused Products’),” and that “the Accused Products ... infringe the '355 patent.” (First Action, D.E. 69 ¶¶ 6, 14.) The First Amended Complaint requested injunctive relief against Earthgrains for its infringing acts, as well as treble damages for those acts, interest, costs and attorneys’ fees. (Id. at 4.)
On January 28, 2005, Sara Lee answered the First Amended Complaint (the “Answer to the First Amended Complaint”) and asserted affirmative defenses. (First Action, D.E. 78.) In the Answer to the First Amended Complaint, Sara Lee reasserted its counterclaim pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202, and maintained its global request for a declaratory judgment that Sara Lee did not and does not in *933 fringe upon the '355 Patent. (See id. at 8, ¶ 35; id. at 9 (requesting an order “declaring that Defendant has not infringed, and does not infringe, U.S. Patent No. RE 36,355.”).) Dr. Kim’s “Reply to Defendant’s Answer to Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint,” filed on March 17, 2005, denied Sara Lee’s non-infringement counterclaim, but it did not specifically identify any additional infringing products or formulas beyond the previously-identified Buttertop, Healthy Choice, and D’ltaliano formulas named in the First Amended Complaint. (See First Action, D.E. 69 at 2-3; First Action, D.E. 84 at 3.) Nor does Dr. Kim suggest that she had amended her sworn interrogatory response — a response that specifically identified only the Buttertop bread and D’ltaliano bread products as infringing (D.E. 23, Ex. B at 8), and that noted that further identification would not be possible until the defense produced requested documents. (See id., Ex. B at 9.)
The parties briefed Markman /claim construction issues during the Fall of 2004. (See First Action, D.E. 54.) On January 10, 2005, Magistrate Judge Mason issued a Markman /claim construction opinion in the First Action. (First Action, D.E. 70.) On March 9, 2005, the court issued an order permitting Dr. Kim “to supplement discovery as to the new claim” added in the First Amended Complaint, i.e., the claim relating to the Healthy Choice products, but the Court explicitly stated, consistent with Dr. Kim’s representations in the motion to amend (D.E. 64 at 2) that Dr. Kim was “not allowed to issue or take new discovery.” (First Action, D.E. 82.)
Dr. Kim ultimately supplemented her discovery responses on April 7, 2005, and identified some 450 infringing formulas, which included the 12 formulas used in the Accused Products. (See First Action, D.E. 88 at 1 n. 1 (Dr. Kim’s filing).) In response, Sara Lee filed a motion to bar evidence relating to the newly accused products (First Action, D.E. 86), which the court granted on May 12, 2005. (First Action, D.E. 89.) In his order, Magistrate Judge Mason stated that:
Earthgrains asks the Court to bar evidence of the newly accused products (the 438 formulas that do not relate to D’ltaliano, Buttertop and Healthy Choice breads). In response, plaintiff argues that her amended complaint alleged infringement generally and did not limit plaintiffs ability to discover and accuse additional bread mixes. We disagree. When this Court entered our 12/29/04 order, we specifically noted that ‘[pjlaintiffs original complaint alleges that Earthgrains’ manufacture and sale of its D’ltaliano and Buttertop breads infringes on plaintiffs '355 patent. Now plaintiff seeks leave to amend to allege that Earthgrains’ manufacture and sale of two Healthy Choice breads (as a licensee of ConAgra) also infringes on the '355 patent.’ Furthermore, in plaintiffs motion for leave to amend, plaintiff stated that she sought leave to amend her complaint to include Earthgrains’ manufacture, sale and offer for sale of the Healthy Choice breads as an Accused Product. This Court only allowed the amendment as to the two Healthy Choice breads because both parties’ experts had addressed these products.
Plaintiffs attempt to vastly expand this case at this late juncture is unacceptable. Discovery is closed and despite plaintiffs claims to the contrary, we find that Earthgrains would suffer substantial prejudice if we were to allow evidence of the newly accused products to be introduced at trial. We find the arguments set forth in plaintiffs response brief to be completely unpersuasive. Accordingly, Earthgrains’ motion to bar evidence relating to newly accused products is granted. At trial, plaintiff will *934 only be permitted to introduce evidence of the D’ltaliano, Buttertop and Healthy Choice bread products that are identified in the first amended complaint.
(Id. at 2.) In the wake of that ruling, Dr. Kim did not seek reconsideration from Magistrate Judge Mason; nor did Dr. Kim move for discovery to be reopened in the First Action. Instead, on May 26, 2005, Dr. Kim filed the present lawsuit. (D.E. I.) 5
II. The Second Action
In the present matter (the “Second Action”), Dr. Kim’s complaint (also, the “Second Action Complaint”) asserts that Sara Lee has infringed the '355 Patent in violation of 35 U.S.C. § 271. (D.E. 1 ¶ 14.) Dr. Kim seeks injunctive relief from the Court pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 283. (Id. at 3.) In addition, Dr. Kim requests that, in accordance with 35 U.S.C. § 284, the Court award her treble damages, attorneys fees, interest and costs, and such other relief as the Court finds fair and proper. (Id. at 4.)
Defendant’s motion seeks dismissal of the Second Action under Rule 12(b)(6) on the grounds that (1) Fed.R.Civ.P. 13(a) prohibits Plaintiff from asserting her claims, (2) the suit is duplicative, and (3) the suit is barred by the prohibition against claim splitting. (D.E. 12 at 2.) For the multiple, independent reasons set forth below, that motion is granted.
LEGAL STANDARDS
“A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) challenges the sufficiency of a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.”
Johnson v. Rivera,
Application of Rule 12(b)(6) is a procedural question not pertaining to patent law, and therefore, the court applies the rule of the regional circuit — in this case, the Seventh Circuit.
See, e.g., Showmaker v. Advanta USA, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
I. Rule 13 Prevents Plaintiffs Claim From Being Brought in the Second Action
Sara Lee argues that the Second Action should be dismissed because its allegations consist solely of compulsory counterclaims that Plaintiff should have and may only assert in the First Action. (D.E. 12 at 8.) The Court agrees.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 13(a) provides that:
*935 A pleading shall state as a counterclaim any claim which at the time of serving of the pleading, the pleader has against any opposing party, if.it arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim and does not require for its adjudication the presence of third parties of whom the court cannot acquire jurisdiction.
Id.
The Seventh Circuit employs the “logical relationship test” for determining whether two claims arise out of the “same transaction or occurrence” for the purposes of Rule 13(a).
See In re Price,
A. Federal Circuit Law Makes Plaintiffs Claim in the Second Action A Compulsory Counterclaim in the First Action
The Federal Circuit has addressed the question of when, once a litigant has sought a declaratory judgment for non-infringement, an infringement counterclaim is compulsory under Rule 13(a). In this regard, for example,
Polymer Indus. Prods. Co. v. Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc.,
Rule 13(a) makes an infringement counterclaim to a declaratory judgment action for noninfringement compulsory. In addition, this court finds that the compulsory nature of an infringement claim in response to a declaratory judgment action for patent noninfringement and the resulting waiver and bar that occurs if not exercised warrant a uniform national rule.
Polymer Indus.,
The rule announced in
Polymer Indus.
was not a new one and was in keeping with well-established precedent relating to compulsory counterclaims in the context of patent law.
See, e.g., Genentech, Inc. v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
The principles enunciated by the precedent of the Federal Circuit and Seventh Circuit dictate that Dr. Kim’s instant suit should be dismissed. In the First Amended Complaint in the First Action, Dr. Kim named three specific brands of Sara Lee products that infringed the '355 Patent. (First Action, D.E. 69 ¶ 6.) In its Answer to the Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint, Sara Lee broadly counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment of noninfringement regarding the '355 Patent. (See First Action, D.E. 78 at 7.) Dr. Kim’s “Reply to Defendant’s Answer to Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint” did not in turn assert or claim in response that any other Sara Lee brands or products infringed of the '355 Patent. Nor, until approximately one year after discovery closed, did Dr. Kim seek to amend her interrogatory response that specifically identified only the Buttercup and D’ltaliano products, and that reflected Dr. Kim’s awareness that other Sara Lee products were potentially infringing.
*937
Thereafter, Dr. Kim brought the instant, Second Action, alleging infringement by Sara Lee of the '355 Patent. (D.E. 1.) Thus, as the plaintiff attempted to do in
Polymer Indus.,
Dr. Kim is trying to bring infringement claims in a second lawsuit against the same patent and the same set of a putative infringer’s products that were put at issue by the Defendant’s counterclaim for a judgment of noninfringement of the '355 patent in the First Lawsuit.
See Polymer Indus.,
It bears mention that, at times in Dr. Kim’s response to the pending motion to dismiss, Dr. Kim argues that Magistrate Judge Mason erred in too narrowly reading the averments in her complaints in the First Action, or erred in his estimation of the diligence of Dr. Kim in seeking to amend her interrogatory responses.
(See, e.g.,
D.E. 20 at 2 (stating that, in the First Action, “Dr. Kim’s Complaint and Amended Complaint properly allege patent infringement generally, notwithstanding any of Judge Mason’s conclusions to the contrary .... ”);
id.
(“Dr. Kim made reasonable efforts to supplement her infringement contentions in the [First Action] and, in particular, to include in that action at least some of the products at issue in this action .... ”).) At times, Dr. Kim also appears to be complaining about the performance of her former attorneys in the First Action (she changed counsel in January and March of 2005 (First Action, D.E. 75 and 83)) and/or various discovery rulings in the First Action.
(See, e.g., id.
at 4 (suggesting that certain disclosures really were not dilatory because they occurred “approximately two weeks after Dr. Kim’s
current counsel
gained access to the 648 formulas,” notwithstanding that the formulas were produced to Dr. Kim and her former counsel almost a year earlier) (emphasis added);
id.
at 10 n. 9 (complaining of lack of access by Dr. Kim to certain discovery materials in the First Action).) These various complaints
might
be (this Court takes no view) of some use to Dr. Kim: for example, she is free, like any dissatisfied litigant, to appeal in the First Action at an appropriate time.
See generally
28 U.S.C. §§ 1291-92;
accord, e.g., Oxbow Energy v. Koch Indus., Inc.,
B. Judicial Estoppel Should Not Apply Because Defendant’s Positions In The Two Actions Are Not Inconsistent
Plaintiff argues that Sara Lee should be judicially estopped from arguing that the products alleged, to infringe the '355 Patent in the Second Action were also at issue in the First Action.
(See, e.g.,
D.E. 20 at 12);
see also Johnson v. Exxon Mobil Corp.,
No. 02 C 5003,
In the First Actión, Sara Lee moved to bar evidence relating to the additional 438 formulas Plaintiff produced in her supplemental discovery responses of April 7, 2005. (See First Action, D.E. 86.) Sara Lee moved to bar evidence of these formulas because of the untimeliness of Plaintiffs accusation via the discovery'supplementation and the unfairness that would result to Sara Lee if evidence of the additional products was permitted at trial. (See, e.g., id. at 1 (explaining that Sara Lee had relied on earlier discovery responses which did not identify virtually any of the 450 products or formulas, notwithstanding that those formulas had been produced to Dr. Kim); id. at 3 (“Now, a year after discovery was closed, the plaintiff seeks to accuse 450 more products of infringing on her patent, providing new [sic] excuse or attempted showing of good cause for her *939 delay.”).) Magistrate Judge Mason, in his ruling, also stressed the belated and untimely nature of Dr. Kim’s effort to fundamentally transform the case by expanding her interrogatory response. (See First Action, D.E. 89 at 2 (“Plaintiffs attempt to vastly expand this .case at this late juncture is unacceptable. Discovery is closed and despite plaintiffs claims to the contrary, we find that Earthgrains would suffer substantial prejudice if we were to allow evidence of the newly accused products to be introduced- at trial.”) (emphasis added).)
Precedent teaches that the threshold for prevailing on a judicial estoppel argument regarding inconsistency is high — the two positions must be' “clearly inconsistent.”
United States v. Christian,
Accordingly, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs claim of infringement in the Second Action should have been brought as a Rule 13(a) compulsory counterclaim in the First Action.
See, e.g., Capo, Inc.,
II. The Second Action Should Be Dismissed Because It Is Duplicative of the First Action
Defendant argues that the Second Action should be dismissed for the independent reason that it is duplicative of the First Action. The Court agrees that the Second Action is duplicative of the First Action and that dismissal is also warranted on this basis.
“[A] federal suit may be dismissed ‘for reasons of wise judicial administration ... whenever it is duplicative of a parallel action already pending in another federal court.’ ”
Serlin v. Arthur Andersen & Co.,
A. The Two Actions Involve The Same . Parties And The Same Claims
As discussed above, in the First Action, Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint claims infringement of the '355 Patent and specifically identifies three brands, Healthy Choice, D’ltaliano and Buttertop (First Action, D.E. 69 ¶ 6), consistent with the narrowing and framing of the dispute that had occurred during discovery. 8 In *940 addition, Sara Lee’s counterclaim for a declaratory judgment of noninfringement puts before the court in the First Action all other potentially infringing Sara Lee products and brands, including the approximately 650 formulas produced in discovery. (See First Action, D.E. 78 at 7 (requesting an “order declaring that Defendant has not infringed, and does not infringe, U.S. Patent No. RE 36,355,” ie., the '355 patent).) In the Second Action, Plaintiffs Complaint claims infringement of the '355 Patent by unspecified Sara Lee products. (D.E. 1.) Clearly, the claims (infringement of the '355 Patent by existing Sara Lee products), and the parties (Dr. Kim and Sara Lee) are the same in the two actions.
B. The Two Actions Involve The Same Potential Available Relief
Turning to the question of whether the available relief is the same, Plaintiff concedes that there is no difference between the injunctive relief sought in both actions.
(See
D.E. 20 at 7 n. 5.) Plaintiff also argues, however, that the amount of compensatory damages available to her in the First Action will depend upon the specific products that are accused of infringement.
(Id.
at 6 (citing
Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. U.S. Plywood Corp.,
The Court accepts the uncontroversial assertion that the amount of compensatory damages available in an infringement case depends in part upon the products proven to have infringed and their profitability. However, if Plaintiffs damages in the First Action end up being restricted to the DTtaliano, Buttertop, and Healthy Choice brands, the relief will have been narrowed by Plaintiffs own actions and inactions — in particular, by her failure to allege additional infringing products in a timely fashion (at least in Magistrate Judge Mason’s view). Therefore, the Court finds that the potential available relief between the two *941 actions is the same, ie., injunctive relief and damages for all Sara Lee products infringing the '355 Patent, and so the two actions are duplicative.
C. Any Negative Consequences Plaintiff May Face in the First Action Do Not Warrant Permitting the Second Action To Proceed
In
Serlin,
the Seventh Circuit addressed a case where the 'district court had dismissed as duplicative a plaintiffs second action against a defendant.
See id.,
Accordingly, the Court finds that the Second Action is duplicative of the First Action, and further does not find that any “special factors” counsel against dismissing the Second Action. See id. (citation omitted). Thus, the Court finds that the Second Action should be dismissed for the independent and adequate reason that it is duplicative of the First Action. See id. (“The irrationality of tolerating duplicative litigation in the federal system is all the more pronounced where, as here, two federal judges sitting on the same district court are —devoting scarce judicial resources to the adjudication of the same charges by essentially the same plaintiffs against the same defendants.”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
III. The Second Action Should Also Be Dismissed As Impermissible Claim Splitting
Moreover, and again independently, the Court finds that the prohibition against claim splitting bars Plaintiffs claim in the Second Action. “It is well established, under the doctrine of ‘claim splitting,’ that a party cannot avoid the effects of
res judicata
by splitting her cause of action into separate grounds of recovery and then raising the separate grounds in successive suits. Rather, a party must bring in one action all legal theories arising out of the same transaction or series of transactions.”
American Stock Exchange, LLC v. Mopex, Inc.,
Plaintiff cites
Jumpsport, Inc. v. Hedstrom Corp.,
No. C 04-0199 PJH,
*943
Moreover,
Jumpsport
is distinguishable in any event. The district court in
Jumps-port
refused to find improper claim-splitting in a second patent suit, where the plaintiff had been precluded from litigating certain infringement claims in an earlier suit because the first court had, on defendant’s motion, barred the litigation of claims concerning certain products for failure to comply with the local rules.
Id.,
Plaintiffs other cited authorities likewise do not direct a different result. For example, in
Del Mar Avionics, Inc. v. Quinton Instrument Co.,
The Second Action asserts the identical patent against the identical Sara Lee products that were at issue — or at least should have been pursued and put at issue — in the First Action. Therefore, the Second Action should be dismissed for the independent reason that it is barred by the prohibition on claim splitting.
See, e.g., CIVIX,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants Defendant’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
So ordered.
Notes
. The various docket entries in this case are designated "D.E___”
. In August 2001, Sara Lee Corporation acquired Earthgrains in a stock purchase transaction, and the combined bakery operations of Sara Lee Corporation and Earthgrains became the Sara Lee Bakery Group, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Sara Lee Corporation. (See D.E. 12 at 2 n. 3.) Sara Lee Bakery Group, Inc. has assumed the defense in the First Action, in addition to being the Defendant in the case sub judice. Therefore, the Court refers to the defendant in both lawsuits as "Sara Lee.”
. The following facts are taken from Plaintiff's Complaint. For present purposes, the Court accepts the allegations as true, as precedent instructs. The Court takes no position on whether the allegations are actually well-founded. Because of the arguments that the parties make in connection with the pending motion, the Court has found it necessary to refer to public court rulings and filings in the First Action
{i.e.,
Northern District of Illinois Case No. 01 C 3895,
Yoon Ja Kim v. The Earthgrains Co.).
The docket entries in the First Action are designated herein as "First Action, D.E.__” The Court notes that a district court may consider matters of public record, such as public court documents, without converting a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6)
into
a
motion for
summary judgment.
See, e.g., Henson v. CSC Credit Servs.,
. Plaintiff refers to this brand of bread as "DTtalia” in both her Complaint and her First Amended Complaint in the First Action; however, it appears that the brand in question is actually called "DTtaliano.” (See, e.g., First Action, D.E. 78 ¶ 13.) Therefore, unless the Court is quoting from Plaintiff’s own filings, this opinion will refer to the brand in question as "DTtaliano,” which appears to be the correct name. (Accord D.E. 20 at 3 (Plaintiff currently referring to the brand as "DTtaliano”).)
. In August 2005, approximately three months after Magistrate Judge Mason issued his order barring evidence, Dr. Kim filed a “combined motion ... to compel the production of documents, things and information and to modify the protective order” in the First Action. (First Action, D.E. 107.) This motion was denied, with Magistrate Judge Mason explaining that “[fjact discovery has been closed for over a year....” (First Action, D.E. 113.)
.
Polymer Indus,
highlighted that, in this instance, the issue, of when Rule 13(a) should be invoked was appropriately resolved by the Federal Circuit, given the essential relationship between the Federal Circuit's exclusive statutory mandate and the procedural issue.
Id.
at 938 (citing
Biodex Corp. v. Loredan Biomedical, Inc.,
. Dr. Kim also suggests that if she is not allowed to litigate these claims, which she steadfastly maintains that she already put at issue in the First Action (see, e.g., D.E. 20 at 2, 3, 10), the result would be "unfair" (id. at 10), "unjust” (id. at 9), and "unreasonable.” (Id. at 12.) However, and without passing on any issues that Dr. Kim might raise on appeal in the First Action, it is commonplace fór a litigant to compromise issues or entire cases by failure to promptly pursue a case or issue or piece of evidence in discovery. For example, defendants can suffer default judgments if they do not promptly respond to cases filed against them. Likewise, any litigant must move with responsible expedition during discovery, and must utilize ordinary tools if their adversary is being unreasonable (for example, a motion to compel), or that litigant may lose the ability to obtain even critical evidence. Judges generally tend to be fairly generous about discovery extensions, but in the First Action, there were at least two discovery extensions afforded to Dr. Kim upon her' request, and there appear to have been at least four discovery extensions overall. At some point, even the most understanding judge will find it necessary to close the discovery period and to leave the record as it has been assembled to that point.
. As Dr. Kim's current counsel surely appreciate, notwithstanding the flavor of some of the rhetoric in their brief, the narrowing of a case and the identification of the actual heart of the dispute through interrogatories and requests to admit is commonplace. It is settled that plaintiffs in the federal notice-pleading regime are allowed to advance potentially sweeping claims in very general terms.
See, e.g., Kirksey v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
If Dr. Kim is found to be unable to meaningfully advance infringement claims concerning the other Sara Lee formulas in the First Action, she will have no cause to complain if that inability is the product of her own decisions, actions, and non-actions. That inability potentially would be the product of any number of factors — including cost-benefit assessments concerning litigation costs made before the successful ConAgra verdict came in, litigation strategy calls by Dr. Kim and her former counsel, and/or failure to diligently pursue and seek to compel discovery in the First Action. And, as stated, Dr. Kim may also believe that Magistrate Judge Mason impermissibly refused to allow Dr. Kim to reformulate discovery responses that had narrowed the potential scope of the case — even though Dr. Kim appeared to be content with her framing of the case via her interrogatory responses prior to the entry of new counsel in March 2005. (First Action, D.E. 83.) However, the Sara Lee counterclaim seeking a declaration of non-infringement is general and sweeping, and a potential failure by Dr. Kim to successfully mount a challenge to various Sara Lee products and formulas in the First Action is not a basis to permit a duplicative second suit here.
Accord Oxbow Energy v. Koch Indus., Inc.,
. Dr. Kim suggests that the Second Action is not barred under the claim-splitting principles embodied in res judicata law because Judge Mason's order barring evidence concerning the 438 claims in the First Action did "not preclude Dr. Kim from accusing those (and/or other) products in another action.” (D.E. 20 at 14.) Dr. Kim's suggestion appears to be an attempt to invoke an exception to claim-splitting and res judicata principles, which exception applies where "the court in an earlier action expressly reserves the litigant's right to bring those claims in a later action.” Central States, Southeast & Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. Hunt Truck Lines, Inc., 296 F.3d 624, 629 (7th Cir.2002) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). This suggestion is misplaced. When the parties in the First Action were litigating whether Dr. Kim would be allowed to amend her interrogatory answers approximately a year after discovery had closed, so as to accuse 438 additional Sara Lee products and/or formulas that had been turned over during discovery, Dr. Kim (clearly aware of the risk of a claim-splitting bar) specifically asked Magistrate Judge Mason to "state that such ruling will not in any way affect Dr. Kim's ability to file a new Complaint specifically directed to the Sara Lee products currently at issue [i.e., the 438 Sara Lee products]....” (First Action, D.E. 88 at 14.) Magistrate Judge Mason’s order contains no such reservation. (See First Action, D.E. 89.) As a result, the exception is inapplicable.
. Dr. Kim also cites
(see
D.E. 20 at 4) an unpublished decision of the Seventh Circuit,
Williams v. Lomen,
