Patent Case Stayed for Second Reexam

Global Patent Holdings, LLC v. Green Bay Packers, Inc., No. 00 C 4623, Slip Op. (N.D. Ill. Apr. 23, 2008) (Kocoras, J.).

Judge Kocoras reassigned a related case consolidating it with this case and stayed the patent infringement cases pending a second reexamination proceeding. New defendant CDW argued that reassignment of the second case pursuant to Local Rule 40.4 was not appropriate because the first case, which was dismissed without prejudice in light of the first reexam, was filed by TechSearch LLC, instead of the current plaintiff Global Patent Holdings ("GPH"). But original plaintiff TechSearch reopened the case before moving to substitute GPH, the current assignee of the patent in suit and TechSearch's parent, as plaintiff. Because TechSearch reopened the case, the first case retained its first-filed status. The fact that TechSearch and GPH were no longer related entities when the case was reopened was not relevant.

The Court also held that the two cases were related because both accused defendants' websites of infringing the patent because they downloaded or induced others to download JPEG and other files.

Finally, reassignment benefited the judicial economy. Neither case had begun significant discovery, so neither would be delayed. Additionally, consolidation would allow one judge to hear the summary judgment motions, which were expected to be numerous, that would apply equally to all parties. The Court, therefore, reassigned the related case to itself. 

The Court also stayed the cases pending the reexam. The first reexam resulted in cancellation of each of the original sixteen claims and the issuance of a single, new claim. GPH argued that a second reexam was unlikely to yield new rejections because the patent had been vetted twice. But the Court noted that the original ex parte reexam acted as a first examination of the single, new claim that issued from the reexam. Additionally, the original ex parte reexam did not allow for third party participation. The current inter partes reexam does, generating a more rigorous review of the claim. Finally, the case was delayed four years for the first reexam. Significant judicial resources would have been wasted had the case proceeded on the original sixteen claims, which the PTO ultimately rejected. The Court did not want to risk wasting judicial resources during the second reexam. And with only a single claim, the Court did not expect the second reexam to take four years.  The case, therefore, was stayed pending the reexam.

Reexam sought for Trading Technologies Patents

The Chicago Sun-Times reported some IP-related news Sunday.  In a piece entitled "Futures Exchanges Fight Back on Patents," the Sun-Times reported that Brinks Hofer, a Chicago IP boutique, filed a petition with the PTO, on behalf of an unnamed client (PTO regulations do not require identification of Brinks's client),  seeking reexamination of patents assigned to Trading Technologies ("TT").  The patents are at issue in a series of Northern District law suits, which have been consolidated to some degree before Judge Moran.  You can read more about the suits in the Blog's archives.  According to the Sun-Times piece, the reexam petition argued that the TT patents were invalid based upon an order-entry system adopted by the Tokyo Stock Exchange several years before the filing dates of the TT patents.  TT responded to the petition's allegations in the Sun-Times piece, saying that the arguments were recycled from the Northern District lawsuits and that the Court was skeptical of the arguments. TT also noted that a trial was set for June 28, just two months away.  Finally, TT pointed out that the majority of reexam petition are granted and said that it "is confident that the validity of its patents will be upheld."